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Che Faym
VOL 12.
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RAYMOND, ALBERTA. THURSDAY,
U
MAY 1, 1913.
nil Leatler,
No 18
Local News Items
Mrs. Walter Rouse and Mrs.
Hanna journeyed to Lethbridge
on Saturday returning the same
day.
STRAYED: Ove Bay mare
white star in forbead, randed
“Hon right shoulder. Also Buck-
skin mare white striped face
Branded LS on right shoulder,
two white hind feet
Each way 9601 s,
$10.00 reward for imformation
hat will lead to recovery.
W. J. Oliver.
‘Winnifred.
Rey. Toombs and wife returned
from Edmonton last Saturday,
where Mrs. Toombs has been at-
tending a convention of the
Farm Womans Institute. Mrs.
Toombs is president of the Ray-
mond organization.
Some good work is being done
on and around the bridges in the
south east corner of Town on the
road to Magrath. A wider canal
is being made and a new bridge
will be put in, This is a good
move 4s the old one was rather
dangerous,
Mr. Frank Steed visited Ray-
mond Jast Saturday and instructed
the M. I, A. of Raymond in the
Folk Dances. The Opera House
furnishes plenty of room for enter-
taining dances and a gvod crowd
turned out,
FOR SALE:— A_ house and
lot close in Raymond, Cheap if sold
by the first of May, Write F. H.
Bun ihe. City Utah
“Mr. J. F. Guradn Tost a valuable
cow last Saturday. The cause
of her death being severe kidney
trouble, The cow was highly es-
teemed by the family.
Iu spite of the rumor that has
been going around that the Spring
south of town is going dry, the
water does not seem to go down
and the well on the east of town is
not being used. There is plenty
of water in the spring and itis ris-
ing every day,
The fence around the park that
has been broken down during the
winter is all fixed, the posts reset
and in good condition to keep any
stray stock out of the park, We
must compliment the town Fathers
for this,
NOTICE:—Dr, S, M. Turner
veterinarian will be in Raymond
Tuesdays aud Fridays at Card’s
Livery baru to attend to all classes
of veterinary work,
The laterals from the canal south
of town are all cleaned out and
ready to carry the water when it is
turned in which will be about the
1oth. of May. The grader was
brought into use aud did a fine
job.
The Alta Theatre pictures have
been exceptionally good the last
week or and on Saturday
May 3rd. will be shone a program
up to the usual standard. Don't
fail to see it.
so,
Mr. Andrew Dahle sent his two
children down to Utah last Sat-
urday where they will stay
with their auntie, They were in
charge of Mr. C. Christenson who
will accompany them as far as
Salt Lake where they will be
met. They are to make their
home in Spanish Fork. —
Mrs. Elizabeth Shields left last
Saturday for Milk River where
she will spend a few days with
her son Wilford who has a
ranch about eight miles out from
the Town of Milk River.
NOTICE:- All kinds of sew-
ing wanted, apply to Mrs. J. E
Fisher residing one lock East
and one lock South of the
Depot.
Messrs. Andrew Dable, Will
Wasden, Ben Peterson and Ed
Hawk left for Medicine Ilat last
Monday where they will work on
a canal for which they have con-
tracted, They are taking some
thirty head of horses, wagons, and
supplies and expect to be engaged
all summer,
Mr, James Budd, brother of Geo,
H. Budd went to Coutts last Satur-
day where he met his wife and two
children who came from Salt Lake,
Mr. Budd and family will no doubt
make their home in Lethbridge
where he is employed.
Mrs. W. A. Redd returned to
her home in Raymond last Satur-
‘day night, having spent the last
month in Southern part of Utah
where has relatives. Mrs,
Redd says that Alberta is just as
far along with their seeding as they
are down South and while she was
in Cedar City they had a_ severe
wind storm that surpassed any-
thing she had ever seen here. Mrs.
Redd ‘said, that Canada looked
good to her and she was glad to be
back.
Mr, Christian Christensen left
last Saturday for Salt Lake City
where he will meet his wife and
family. Mr, Christensen has sold
out his holdings here in this country
and expects to make his home in
Utah,
she
Mrs. May Weed made a business
trip to Taber, Barnwell and Grassy
Lake the first of the week in the
interesyp giggthe Y.L. M.A.
Mrs, Weed no doubt will ascertain
just how strong these three Wards
will be represented at our big M. I,
A, day on the 24th, of May
1913.
FOR SALE:;— Seed or feed oats
baled Blue Joint and loose Alfalfa
Apply, Brimball Bros
Raymond.
LOST:
One Brown mate colt
star in forehead, $5, rewaid for}
the return of same to,
Burt Kenney,
Raymond,
Alberta,
Mormon
Persecution.
Melbourne, April 24 —Inves-
tigations by the police into the
projected departure of a young
woman from this city to Salt Lake
City forthe purpose of joining
the Mormons, is likely to lead to
drastic actions on the part of the
federal government.
The premier has announced
that should the circumstances of
this woman's departure warrant
it, the government will intervene
and stop her leaving the country
for Utah, Furthermore, itis stated
that future visits Mormons or Mor-
mon agents to the commonwealth
will be subjected to close super-
vision by the emmigration dep-
artment,
_———_
He learned good
Manners.
Aceitain collector representing
a big firm in the east, thinking no
doubt he was out in the wild
woods when he landed in Ray-
way and manner that a
‘ . t
mond, commenced his work in aj; ?
slave
driver would assume
in some
African Town. But he hadn't
gone far when he bumped up
against one who wouldn’t stand
forhis bullying. This certain
collector after a heated argument
strarted to remove the article
from the house but the husky
owner interfered and a scrap en-
sued. The marshal was called
inand tried to settle the affair
but this haughty collector who
was all wrought up wouldn't
stand for any settlements and
wanted to lick the marshal but
thought better of it and so our
marshal is still living. However
this mighty embassador of an
eastern firm was told in plain
language that his kind of tactics
didn't go here in Raymond and
if he wanted to avert trouble in
thefuture he must try and be more
of a gentleman.
ete oe
Selling their children
to buy food,
“Rain has not fallen yet and
the famine is upon us. The poor
are starving, and today we sawa
mob of desperate beggars rushing
through the streets seizing any
food exposed for sale. Some
made raids on peanut stands,
others on chinese bread boards
while others grovelled inthe dirt
for grain or other food dropped
there.
“The gentry are beginning to
distribute relief in self-defence
but there must be an insistent
appeal made at home, and made
quickly. The natives are even
selling their children for smali
amounts in order to buy food.
Every day one can see unfor-
tunates dying by the roadside in
the city.”
This is the graphic picture por-
trayed in the letter just received
from Doctor Paul V. Hel liwell
medical missionary at K aifeng
Honan, China, a recent graduate
of the University of Toronto.
For months no rain has fallen
in a large section ot the province
of Honan. Add tothis disastrous
sand storms, and the result is, as
might be expected, almost entife
destruction of crops. especiall”
rice, which 1s the staple food of
the people.
M. I. A. Quarterly
Confer ence.
—wT
A week from next Sunday will
be Stale conferance and usually at
this time of the year we have visit-
ing brethern from Salt Lake City.
On the Sunday evening will be held
the M I.A. conference and a good
program has been arranged, All
are cordially invitéd to attend
The following is the program to be
rendered;
PROGRAM,
1, Report of Y.M.M.I.A,
Stake Officer,
2. Vocal Solo Orson Bridge,
13. Report of Y.L.M.I.A,
Stake Offiicer,
4, Mixed Quartette Sec, Ward.
5. lecture
Vocal Solo
7. Lecture
Vocal Solo
Musical Selection Magrath
Vocal Solo Kise Clark
10,
J.G, Allred,
Grant Young,
Maydell Cazier. |
Vern Redd,
|
|
[Monthly
Priesthood
Meeting.
On Saturday lastin the Knight
Academy Assembly hall, the reg-
ular monthly Priesthood and
Relief Society meetings were
held. A good representation of
the different wards were present
considering the busy time of year,
In the conjoint meeting some
verv good advice was given by
Prest. Allen the policy of the
chutch respecting the young
peopleand their duties to one
another. The Relief Society
adjourned to their meeting where
the best methods were discussed
for the betterments of Relief soc-
ciety work, The different bodies
of the Priesthood remained in
sessioninthe hall where they
were addressed for a few minutes
by Elder Grant Young lately re-
turned from a mission, and Prest.
Brandley of Stirling, who gave
to the congregation the fruits of
his visitto Conference. He wish-
ed that conditions would so shape
themselves as to permit all Bish-
ops and all who cared to visit
the general conferences at least
once a year in Salt Lake City as
the spirit one feels there a
great ‘builder up’’ in this life
we are trying to live as best we
can.
There was a meeting of all the
Bishops present after the general
one, also the workers in the re-
ligion classes met and discussed
ways and means to impress upon
@veryone the impoiiauce and ben-
efits of religion class work.
is
MONTENEGRIN
TROUBLE.
One difficulty after another arises
prevent the consummation of
in the Balkans. o1
three months ago it
to
peace ‘Two
was
that the end of hostilities
thought
Was €m-
minent. Thenthe pubiic woke to
find that the Young ‘Turks
effected a revolution in Constanti-
nople and had repudiated the peace
policy of the old of the
Ottoman Empire, ‘The fat was in
the fire again, Every one feared
what the next Gay
had
council
would bring
out,
Fortunately Enver
colleagues have not
Bey and his
been ai
accomplish anything and a constant
succession of ‘Turk reverses led
| a request to the powers to take the
lead in making new governmental
arrangements for this distressed
pert of Europe,
The work has been proceeding
satisfactorlly for several weeks, ac-
cording to all Many
assurances have given that
the foreign ministers have « perfect
understanding with
and that there is no danger
le to
to
accounts,
been
another
of a
the
one
falling out among them
negotiations.
But Seutari’s fall and the
defiance of Montenegro has
again upset all calculations, ‘That
the latter’s resistance can amount
to anything, if the relations of the
powers are really as stated is not
likely,
Its stand appeals to sentimental-
It is the case of the little fe!-
low standing out against the over-
whelmiag odds and there will be
those who willsay that the great
Christian nations should be asuam-
ed of themselves in trying to compel
a people who have held back
Turkish invasion for ceuturies
over
bold
once
ists.
the
to
give up what they have won
a desperate fight,
But what has be considered
are the generai interests at stake
Europe cannot be allowed to be
couvulsed because a nation of a few
hundred thousand people wishes
toincrease-its territory. Itis not
proposed to give Scutari to any ex.
to
ater! 4 LETTER FROM
THE MISSION FIELD
Lancaster England
Whoever takes a trip from the
istiag power, but to one that is to] south of England to the English
be created, Albania. That this
solution will prevail and that the
present clouds will pass over other
here reason
lieve,
is every to be.
en
A GOOD
OPPORTUNITY.
The Made-In-Canada train
will soon be here, exhibit-
ing the products of
Canada.
Editor of Raymond Leader:
Dear Sir:—
No doubt you have already
the
Made-in-Canada
exhibition train tour.
heard through Press some-
thing about the
This travel-
ing Canadain National Exhibition
will be in Raymond, Wednesday,
June 4th, (Time of arrival will be
It
of twelve cars containing the ex-
hibits of the products of a number
of representative Canadian indust-
annonnced later. ) will consist
ries, which will be arrasged as at-
tractively and compactly as possi-
ble, The whole train will be ele.
ctric lighted and will be splendidly
The din-
ing car will be fitted upas a dem-
decorated throughout.
onstiating car, and in connection
with the exhibition illustrated
lecture with lantern views
an
of var-
ious features of Canada’s industrial
The
illustrat-
ed lecture will be free, and there
is no question that the train will be
development will be given,
whole exhibition und the
one of the most novel altractions
that has ever been in your
city,
Representatives of the firms ex-
hibiting will be on the train, and all
will be glad to learn of the natural
resources and other advantages of
yoar city and district for manufac-
turing.
In tact, the manufacturer of the
East is depending upon you through
this train, to give him an idea of
industrial
lines in the Prairie Provinces, You
will see, therefore, that the exhib-
ition and the various teatures in
connection with it will be thorough-
ly in accord with your
what cau be done along
policy of
encouraging industries to locate
in your district, There will be no
better opportuuity afforded you of
acquainting the citizens of Ray-
mond generally with the meaning
of industries to
than this train.
The exhibition will be unique in
the history of iudustrial develop-
ment in Canada and will be of
great educational value to those
who view it. We are anxious that
the community
it should have the largest patronage
possible from the residence of your
city and district, and hope that
you will use every opportunity to
live
encourage a interest
Made-in-Canada Sgecial, Admis-
sion will be free,
Yours very truly,
H. D, Nully,
Secretary.
among
your citizens over the coming of the
Lakes, or to the modern watering
place, Norcombe, or to the most
attractive scenery of Yorkshire, or
a dozen other places of renown, is
almost sure to pass through the
ancient town of Lancaster, the
county seat of Lancashire. And
if the traveller be healthy, wealthy
and wise, perhaps other wise, he wiil
break his journey here and so com.
With its
antiquity and beauty it is an ideal
place to turn ones thoughts to the
romance of history, being in strik-
ing contrast to the bustling com-
mercial parts the south-
mete his explorations.
of
ward,
Lancaster was an important place
even in Roman times, having been
visited by the Emperor Agricola,
and since then its fortunes have
tisen and fallen so remarkably that
one must go far towards under-
Standing the history of the nation
to trace aud explain the origination
of this famous center of political
warfare. From a mere hamlet at
the time of the Conquest after the
Scotch marauders had abolished its
fortifications, it jumped almost
immediately to the position of a
walled and castled Norman strong-
hold. This case of a sudden change
is quite characteristics. It isclosels
associated with the name of John
O’Gaunt, brother of the Black
Prince, who fell heir to the place
in the fourteenth century, but lat-
est opinion is that this worthy
never visited his possessions at all.
We are sorry for him, thats
all,
No doubt the accomodations for
travel in his day were rather
scant,
Today the town with its cobbled
crooked streets and ancient parish
church and castle, breathes much
of the spirit of the past, Dwelling
houses and villas, even the most
modern are built of gray and sand
stone, and many of them are hand-
some, In fact the place is quite a
residential center on account of its
healthy and convenient posit-
ion,
It is very leisurely, conservative
cld town quite distinctive on
account of the densely populated
manufacturing and milling cities
sO numerous near Lancaster. It
seems rather to partake of the
quiet restfulness of the pastoral
countries to the northward, many
of whose products it markets,
sheep, grain, and most all kinds
of vegetables, etc. Handsome
parks and buildings testify to the
generosity of Lancastrians who
have gained wealth in the district.
Primarily. Lancastsr isa gentle
and pleasant reminder of a beaut-
iful relic. To bring in cotton or
wollen mills, to discover iron or
coal in the vicinity to widen or
staighten its streets to stimulate
its sluggish traffic in any way,
however valuable from an econ-
omic standpoint, would simply
be to destroy its chief interests
to the traveler, and its loss would
be entirely unjustifiable and
irreparable from the traveller’s
point of view, I am laboring here
as a missionary for the church of
Jesus Christ-of Latter Day Saints
and am enjoying my labors very
| much,
Yours Respectfully,
N. J. Anderson,
AY WM PN A
THE LMNADER. PAVAIONYD
NEW TYPE OF SUBMARINE
England Has Designs of Vessels Ca:
ZAM-BUK DOES CURE PILES
| Ease That Sore Joint ’
THEATREGOERS WIN STRIKE
Takes Just Nine Seconds for Manager
; : “ sre '
Irs { 1 y et
priet “7 ‘ “tal il tel veld ae preena: ene to Surrender Nerviline Will Do It
‘ : . et ae Atlantic
ar, B.( fYered from piles for ’ Sydney.—Theatregoers of Mount:
vent Went to doctor after doctor! Yeadon, Wngland.—Naval develop-| Gambier, In South Australia, went on} The Champion Clog and Pedestal
in vain Wing went to Spokane bal ‘1 a ws cee tha nature ate) strike recently Dancer of Canada Tells How ta
: 1s place der i pre 1, "
and had an operation, Twelve months! (Ay US Place ee ent ae hehe he management of a travelling Keep in Trim
tines axe ys } ; he we) secrecy H ourse of the te ane . - . .
afterward } ‘ is a daguain, S Xe twelve. months sone btoniaNine 46 } company ad manded 28. fur admission, Few men in his profession are bet-
save ine ¢ rea shout 1 nh ‘ S01 astonist 5 , isitor " . .
~ » ay It : 7 4 ” a *| tails will become known regarding the rhe \ ‘sh er did wit propose - Pay) ter known than Mr. Thomas Hogan,
oom Hongal e' ry rh changes in warship types, but there suite a ie tt ‘% nt ny ay A ned Sritéarcatiar trevor aa ry gad
ret on I » boxe rave m or ’ 8, suite n outside 0 or “- » pene 6400S N
7 th ' } "' ‘i her : . will be none more noteworthy th in the evare ne ; A % ve ag Pichet sgh > writes:—"To limber up a stift joint,
ue han anyth g e | lad ried,! dove lopment of the submarine a theatregoer's aeete ; a ets hah |to remove every sense of soreness
so | we 0 1 the treatment In An entirely new type of underwater | ® ation a ind wit hin a s w minu e8 | from tired muscles I can tell you no-
: short I beg ) 1 altos craft, of considerable offensive power are. betes =pret - ally a ot were) thing compares with Nerviline, It
Sah hh better, and I saw that) and capable of crossing the Atlantic at| “ete—liad agreet ated te Ne <8: \is really a wonderful liniment, and I
/< vas going to cut me, Well,!, high tate of coeed. is being built The mauag x Sor tes - the door- | use it continually simply because I
I \ } ; 1 * , > fuse t the re ire . " a :
is b - 1 ’ for the British navy >» Tanti fused to make the required | fing at Ee 2 muscles and joints
These craft will carry guns, but in AM i | Supple and entirely free from pain and
te e) ’ ’ ll give oc w | otf .
i : ana addition they will have a broadside ri bh Boe tM : poten’ Bdge eae stiffness. I earnestly recommend
n Phi tha Bn il all: of torpedo tubes Hitherto under-| [Me nev ae a4 , t! er that | Nerviline to every person that requires
oly or any! water craft have only mounted a} wks hgh iT be. ee be i. 1 of cy He | to use a Strong, penetrating, pain-sub-
— : A. weet nt ry | couple, or at the most three tubes, § tice Will be me etna aint ‘he “te duing liniment
Zam-t 2. a druggis and! The submarines of the E class were} counted abt to nine and then the) Por Rheumatism Nerviline is a won-
welt provided with four, but the newest ak i min ee basilar ong | Ueri for Sciatica it cures where others
: = ~ vessels is unde ood, are designed | ; Sia we ort hey I nh ne ‘trooped into fail; for Lumbago, stiffness and cold,
" to carry four twin 21-inch tabes, That | ®2d the quondam strikers trooped Into | nothing surpasses it Keep Nerviline
MALE HELP WANTED so: ty ss y will be able to fire the hall and th » un * papas Sipe | nani it's good to take inwardly, de
il mati tet eight. torn after an existence of about twenty) ctroys internal pains quickly, and is
AGENTS WANTED The displacement of the new ships | M/Puces just as good for oulward application.
Wanted—Agonts for Hall and Winé | is at present a matter of secrecy; in|
aterm Insurance. Apply The Canada sou it is put at 1500 tons, |
Weather Insurance Company, (Doml® | jin ot? nuch higher, but there is
lon License), Winnipeg, Man. } gener ment that the speed will
t not n twenty-five Knots on|
FEMALE HELP WANTED the irfac ich is the speed of the
as yrpedo-boa estroyer of eight years! not
LADIES WANTED—To do work at, # A rmored belt and
hon a rating hion tops . aircraft guns will be other features of
: Oty abe er, Pt : . caal ithe new type and they will, of course
make from $3 to $5 per day; pleasant | ir n by internal combustion en
wor Armour Art Co., Dept N, 43) ° t iternal co stio
Steele Blk Winnipeg mvs
k m th brief ou
line of the qual
tl new type it is at once
apparent ut the functions of the
torpedo-bo destroyer ire belug
surped by the submarine
It is
] 4
is not probable that the destroy
f the X Ra ral a wall eyed er will at on drop out of our ship
I I = a! an nose building program The new vess:'s
a h he shavat are at present experimental, and must
8 r a couple of years or
- n
e w meantime there are plans
before tl admiralty for a new kini
‘ - of destroyer, plans for which may
- ad an edented move in :
¢ acting for the build
e war ps, and may give us a
fore a a 1 iofa of a speed
alrea been ¢ i forty knots = several |
Pinto Shell ade - ta bg firing ns specially |
: nounted f ise against air-craft
e Ss by side with these new types
tal t yf marin there will be built :
: wer < small under-water ves 3
HUDSON BAY KNITTING CO. | 6 jure! astal defense purposes
Canada’s Expert Glove and Mitt Makers, fir these, at present called |
MONTREAL. the X iz built by Scott's Ship
t j Engineering Company at
Greeno ; a craft of only
hittin, | COME with a surface speed
xis, similar to that of
1
W be in the forthcoming
CANADA na
STOCK FOODS Regge 8hy aaah taal
1 ( chill last
Something Better *°" j 1 l armored, wil
pci ne eres ee a » Db v d f Oy OL them
The Canada Food & Drug Products Co. 1 1 down ad the year,
I nor details from
1ioW building |
iculars of the design of the
new Dattleships—or, as they will in
. uture come to be called, capital ships
ACTION _ oer ire natur not available for put
S 7 is eve indication
.
be in st respects
similar to tt Queen Elizabeths of
the current program, carrying eight
of the 15-inch ins that throw a 1950
pound shell “hey will have only
g purposes and
be a num
icie mount-
New Calendar
Balt. jar and the hours of the
Stewart mesting Clipping Machine many of us almost lil
* aasier.clips taster and ciorer and stay > { natural and immutable or
eel bar, enclosed, protect and however much trou
Has six feet of new .
aft and e ew so 5
nt indefensible system : : +t . 3
yping head, Get panend pn have felt that it was) ™Y 4 ints were still and Swol oa
ene from your deaier, every machine guaranteed, a = 4S! consulted different doctors and took
CHICAGO F!.EXIBLE SHAFT CO. atmo npiou o suggest a » med e.- but: did “not more
f 2 Salle Ave cnicaco, uL.8 change of i Giv us bac our! ‘elr mec eee) eee .
w catacg Of most modern line of ‘ rT? pe mob wt t than temporary re}
{ hearing machines * . 2 . 1en ; . } }
Gre caler roduced in-| 4 nelehbor ad 1
3 liams’ Pink Pills and I g
» ( aut I 1 he days of! liams |
Julius ¢ i 1e has been| After tak ng a few &
a ld »forn nde vho would were greatl pil i
y ; a : ; r : _, | tinued their u n re tre le com- f i
1 é i - ’ 1 1 ex ae
Ja 7 ii at 4h x pletely disappear I ¢ ol Perrin’s Make
1 i I i « ‘ 7 oth Ss
10 of his upr lip, don i1row | Mo B. Colswor P recommen ni t
y aving-wa t 1er re ¥ fo 1 who suffer as I fron pans
ar oted | or, H ea and tort b.OF FaCUMA
u migh t t p d mo : If you suffer fron t 1 n or
. " ne ext iny o dis e » Rin
sie the } to cure yourself toda) ie
v bib 1y has a co J yeas $ ape! liams’ Pink Pills Sold by all n di-|
oC 1 the bach The first con-| j x 7 : cine dealers or by mail a
corda was prep red by French) ., Patent a rie atl +, | box or six boxes for $2.50 h >|
mon 1 ar 1-4) 7, + t itt inca e© | pr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brock
| Then each month would « mence on note ‘ '
ileeiaeeihe.-" seek idimeaneenaie e, Ont
Sunday and t t, eighth, fifteenth
LUNATIC AS MAGISTRATE and twe! second days of each month
Sundays President Had
Sits on Bench and Proceeds to Dis- ale is quoted as saying that)
pose of Ordinary Business nonth of four weeks will come
Par At the usual hour of the)| 48 a commercial necessity The ad-
magisterial sitting at Neuilly, Paris, | Justment to the change would be very
a man entered the court correctly’ small compared to that necessitated
dressed, took his seat at the magis-| When standard time was introduced on
trate’s desk, began writing on papers| transcontinental railways. Mr. Cots
and when applicants came before him! worth has lilerature to distribute, pok
listened to them gravely. ing fun at the present
Some of his questions seemed a lit- ins, school children need no long-| to any elaborate ady sing, for tt]
tle incoherent, and one of the appli-| er le Thirty days hath September.| has not been so advertise 1, but is en-|
cants called the caretaker It was | Urel) due to the merits of this Oil
then found that the supposed magis- The Growth of English as a WV dic in : In every city, town |
trate was a wandering lunatic and hamlet in the country iti ty
his Fhes > are sen £08000 mon 2 after solely because of its good quali- J
he engl dictiona exclusive <¢ 2 : of
fovelan lannia me aaa a | ee sitahbsear a to think twice to decide
ms ~\ : turies Shakespeare carried about in
si ‘ his head five times as many words as Sure Proof
DO D DS the dictionary then contained. Today | But are you sure, persisted the
it has a hundred words for every one
which good writer will use The
fe greatest gains in the number of words
oe | record within the last fifty years
,, : e have, of course, come from a minute
#/ raking over of all cessible Englisl
AG, ’ documents and from special branche
ae ‘
Un {| ‘ a of human labor, particularly the sci
ences, in which changing conditions
have made necessary hosts of new
names
Rheumat!
GH-s' O15
is , Princess Confirmed
(ABE TE FPO wi 1
n Princess Mary, the only
g George and Queen
daughter
ubers of the household
of the palace wer
rowds assembled outside the
witness the arrival of th
rer Alexandra
olne Cempany, Limited,
Toronte,
Canace.
W.WN. U. 043
anth} customary to ornament the center of
{I
have been cured by this medicine ¢s
Miss Mary B. Kelly, South Dummer.)
Ont Miss Ke says: “Some time
tago I had a ver ad attack of rheu-|
stem If} Electric Oil enj
Mary confirmed by the Archbi
op of Canterbury in the Chapel Royal)
Ge. a box er six boxes tor $2.50, 4, 2 2 ngham Palace recently
at all dealers, or The Dodds Medi- ibers of the royal family
Se a Tee Large family size bottle, 60c; small
Needles in China size, 2
TRAGIC LAMP EXPLOSION =}
—— ‘
Woman blaze Sets Child's Clothes
on Fire
recently outside a house in the Mau
bourg St. Martin in Paris.
Mme, Haumond was filling a lamp,
when it exploded and set fire to her
clothes, Her husband was out, and
her two children, a baby boy 2 years
old and a girl 6, were in the room
with her.
The woman rushed.to the window,
screamed for help, and as the flames
from her clothing caught those of the
baby in her arms, she threw him down
to a woman in the street who tried
tocatch himin herapron, The apron
strings broke, the baby was badly
hurt and Mme, Haumond, who threw
herself out of the window after hor
child, broke both her legs.
A fireman made his way Into the
house and rescued the elder child, the
girl, who had becom eunconscious.
The baby's condition is critical.
——
Sweet and palatable, Mother Graves’ |
Worm Exterminator is acceptable to}
children, and it does its work surely |
Paris.—A dramatic scene pel
25c; at all s(>rekeepers and
The importation of needles at Chung-| druggists or The Catarhozone Co.,|
king last year increased by 31,963,000
suffalo, N.Y |
to 334,700,000 In many parts of the | |
are put to a use thatis| I would like to talk to you about}
generally known. It is| your typewriters, said the suave young |
salesman when he had been admitted
to the private office of the magnate.
Well, what have you got to say?
How do you like the ones you have? |}
giving perfect satisfaction? |
know anything about them. |
consider such
Province these
perhaps
the roof ridge of a Chinese house with
an elaborate plaster decoration—usual- |
lv in the form of a design embodying
the character fu, meaning happiness. | Are they
To prevent this being damaged by the I don't
depredations of crows, large numbers|I have no time to
' stuck point outwards in-| things
while it is still soft.; But thay play an important part in
} your business { should think you)
of needles ar
to the plaster
Man only from himself can suffer | Would want to be sure that you had
wrong: } the bes
His Reason fails as his Desires grow Talk to the general manager. 1)
strong; j have no time to discuss typewriters
Hence. wanting Ballast, and too fuil) With you. 1 never saw but one type |
to Sail writet that interested me. |
He lies exposed to every rising Gale. What kind was that, if I may ask. |
aS REN EE tek PEE A slim brunette I married her}
Lawyers would probably starve to and have paid no attention to any|
death if the food killer wasn't so far) ° her since. |
behind with his work
MARCH WEATHER |
RHEUMATIC WEATHER) °°", come uts'g
LINIMENT myself as pre-
i : scribed it in my practice where a lint-]
Victims Can Cure Themselves With ment wa required and have never
Dr. Williams’ Piak Pills, | failed to get tie desired ettect
— C. A. KING, M.D. |
W ning of March people
ho f i with rheumatism be
gin tc a pleasant reminders of
their troub rt weather 1
in i valmy and springlike one
day cold and piercing the next Ouek
) sudden changes of weather Ma “ rank tai cs ehat eae
ts the pa and tortures of ” FS pe Fe nats i acoametee
imatism, lum ro and sciatica & ) m
in But it must be borne in mind Wel Re Sago ae seat ale
that although weather conditions start) 1... money and ¢ i eeina!
the pains, the tr yuble is der ply rooted ah othe shar
in the blood, and can only be cured’ money it
blood Alt the lotions ’ ’
in the world can’t cure
Rubbing may seem to
and could
through the
and liniments Women are naturally charitable.
rheumatism Thev . dah eathev- shave ai
the pain while you are rubbing, rhe would m i« ? re n ah a se
. ret tl hers than kee
but there ite: value. ens, Only) O°. "rt. Olpe! 1a el
through the blood can you cure rieu Man wants a little here b ry
ca A Thet'a hy Dr. Williams"! Ms ints a lit
matism That's why Dr EMF few minutes.
Pink Pills have so many thousands of
cures of this trouble to their credit
The new rich blood which they ac tual
ly make drives out the poisonous acid
and rheumatism is vanquished. Among
many sufferers from rheumatism who
matism At times I would be
fined to bed for a couple of day
would seem almost paralyzed
the intense pain in my t I
At such times 1 could not walk
A New Kind of Cow
A little boy , an elephant f
the first time, Th | |
O pop, look 4 1 her
horns in her ating hay with}
her tail
Won Fame on its Merits. —The un-|}
bounded popularity that Dr. Thomas’
ys is atiributable
grouchy customer, that this ‘ere stuff |
will cure my
Oh, yes, 1
the doctor
CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS
AA pert nd money if PAZO
|
|
|
concrete silo.
rheumatiz
plied the drug clerk: ¢
refuse to recommend i
\ JiND, rain, fire and. ji
more food-value for your stor
ee ar REED
Poor John
hn vou ever P to ha the
John, you ! ! f the O matter whether you h
thing iy to you, she complained.
Well, dear, he replied, {| hay to
gévertising circular.
free. Jus
by return mail,
work part of the time
| Minard’s Liniment Cures Burns, Ete
Little Drops of Water
° snona Canada Cement Company Limited
replic etful 507° Herald Building, Montreal
he hurt my business i 669
| used for pulling ¢
; stopped at every hydran
|making a
jnot actually traveling
Do not be misled—
PERRIN’S
destruction, because it cannot be destroyed.
concrete keeps the ens
“What the Farmer Can Do With Concrete,” g
about silos, but about scores of other uses for concrete on the farr
A handsome book of 160 pa
Address Publicity Manager
and promptly.
A Sad Day
What do you consider the saddest
day of your life?
The day I consented to let my wife
do her own cooking,
The Truth
Knights of the grip will appreciate
this yarn, which is told of one of their}
number. He had been summoned as
a witness in a case at court, his em-|
ployers having sued a delinquent cus-!
tomer, and the lawyer for the defense
was cross examining him |
You travel for the Hooque & Croo-|
que company, do you? asked the at-!
torney.
Yes, sir. |
How long have you been doing it?
About ten years |
Been travelling all that time, have;
you?
Well, no, sir,
hasty
replied the witness,
mental calculation,
I have put
in about four years of that time wait-
ing at railway stations, junctions and,
watering tanks for trains,
It's the CLEANTST, SIMPLEST, and BEST HOME
DYE, one can buy--Why you don't m have to
know what KIND of Cloth ypyg§agile sg made
of.--So Mistak re Impossib
Send for F
Booklet giving
The JOMNSON-RICHAT
Montreal, Canada
Alert, and
er colors,
» Limited,
ASK FOR
GLOVES
and OOK for the trade-mark.
You willthus be sure of gloves
famous for Style, Pitaad Finish,
What kind of a
silo will yours
be >
Wood—or
Concrete ?
which is the best material.
gltning are alike defied by concrete You
Concrete silos ure
Hage at an even temperature, so that it *
k,
YOU CAN BUILD ONE YOURSELF
ave ever used concrete or mot, you can bul
thai the
Dest,
cures’? better,
ives all the information you w
es, well itustrated, and written for farmers,
send your name and address on a postcard or tn a letter and the book will be sent free
wer you buy Cement be sure
Canada” label is on
every bag and barrel,
Jarmers have found fo be the
NERVOUS
MEN“ WOMEN
are actually weak, run-
down—they are slowly
deteriorating—they need
strength and nourishment
for body and brain.
Scott’s Emulsion corrects
nervousness it is essentially a
food—a concentrated, nourish-
ing, curative food to restore the
healthy action ‘of body cells,
fortify the blood, sharpen the
appetite, make strength,
health, energy and vigor.
As pure as milk, itis readily
assimilated —nourishes every
organ and every tissue. Phy-
sicians everywhere recom-
mend Scott’s Emulsion with
absolute confidence in its
beneficial results. Don't wait
—start now, but insist on
SCOTT’S.
No alcchol or drugs.
Scott & Bowne. Toronto, Ontario 12-65
GOLF AT OLYMPIC GAMES
English Cricket, However, Is Rejected
at Berlin
Berlin.—Golf will appear for the
first time in the Olympic Games pro-
gram at Berlin in 1916. The sched-
ule of events just drawn up by the
German managerial committee states
that the committee fias decided to in:
clude golf, after rejecting orieket.
The committee ha; also determined
a special compliment to the great
rman gymnastic organizations, to
give gymnastic experts a special place
in the program for an exhibition of
this German specialty The teams
will also meet in competition gym
nasts from other conntric
Pretty, but Useless
Mrs. Hugh Fracer tells a story of
a holiday spent in an out of the way
part of Ltaly
She had occasion to reward a coun-
tryman for some service with a gold
Apparently he had never seen
such a thing before, for he looked at
it dubiously for a moment and then
said: It is very pretty, but I think I
would rather have money, please
When the same sum was counted
out to him in silver he took it with
coin
loud protestations of gratitude and
went a feeling, apparently, like @
millidnaire
actions of the man behind the
5 UTS) 10 aaa
ia = =
Better stick to your own small line,
my son The other fellow’s biwiness
snt all profit.
———
Gloves that are not stamped with either the trade-mark or the name
are not the genuine.
F you were to build two silos —one of wood, the other of concrete—side by side, and
then could see them as they will look after five years of service, you wouldn’t have
{n a few years more there
wouldn't be much of the original wooden silo left—the repairing you'd have to do would be
as troublesome and cost as much as the building of an entirely new one.
five, ten, fifteen or even twenty years will make no diffe
But the passage of
ence to the hard-as-rock wall of the
CONCRETE SILOS LAST FOREVER
need no insurance inst ite
best for another reason, The
aud therefore contains
'd a concrete silo. Our book,
It tsn’t ac
it le
Canada's
ee
———
i * THE LEADER, RAYMOND, ALBERTA.
A Siberian
Exile
beeanse he knew something of her HOW TO SAVE, | | THE SOUTH SEA BUBBL |
story, thet she war thirsting for re- YOUR EASTER HAT. . MABEL'S CHITCHAT
| Tenge. ‘ Hints Fer Fighting the Heh Cost of ervey Facings on the Newest and Gigantic Swindle That Came Near te
PP govt me) gee he os Livine. Smartest Shapes of the Season. Wrecking the English Nation,
rt, bu SS on out giving = The problem of how to lighten the rhe g vi von BD) Id stoc : , et pigantic s#indiiag
any other sign of recognition. She was cost of high living is a ‘ital one to- Phe reuts sits Aven walemeld See Pe Pakp mort gigan Pride
a her!
f hats to choos “ir Raster , achemée at was ‘ monwan lia t « : j
|alone and sat at one end of a table day, and especially is this question an ae das canis Une taae daa her | the ever } viyated, The Woman Who's Determined to
where there were no other diners. Her absorbing to the poor man’s wile. / - gern, Beet ~ ce a swindie that came very near wreck lec
\ eee was to Borden, so he could not | Her houschold motto should surely be pos are w ide brimmed, with a slight nd the’ Engle ation # Was Bie Broz lease Too Much.
omen see her face. He left the dining toom to make the best of everything. Rus. #8 on one side, while others have a fect inoWn to lsteeen es the Bout en
. » “ i ecided roll all around, the under brim ; :
And the Charge That before her and waited in the adjoining kin says, “Industry without art is 4 in Sea Bulible
room, where he hoped to get another Dfutality.” And that is justly so of Semifacing of changenble silk, the ex The get riv-quick scheme was not HOPELESS TO CHOKE HER OFF
Came Later sight, of her. While at dinner he bad the homemaker, Her duty is to make treme outer edge being covered With ony backed
by the English Partia-
her home just as attractive as pos. straw. Most of these hats bave very oreiut ani the House of Lords. but ’
AG made a story to At her case. This Was sible, and to do that she must keep tittle trimming. Some hats have only also by the creat financiers of thar Chafing Dish Set In Crash Toweling le
By FB. A. MITCHEL | WHat he fancied: in mind that “a penny saved is & one large quill, which penetrates the country and even royalty itself. One Just the Gift For Hostess Who Is
She had suffered in the mines of penny earned” and that every piece prim on the left side. Three small fortunate feature of the project was Fond of Entertaining Informally at
Kara, She had joined hunger strikes. of food thrown out is money thrown jrignt red velvet bows are also used to that it was on such a Jarge scale that Supper or Luncheon.
She had fallen under disease in the away. trim the elde crown on the ‘eft side C!y the wealthy ‘people of the ulin
Edwin Borden, after baving graduat- damp prisons and living upon un- Here are four things that help much (7 te meer ce were made to suffer, | r Dear Blsa—I have just come to
ed at a Jaw school, suddenly found wholesome food. She had found an i" lowering the cost of high living pe canara van nck ie being unable t t New York from a week end spr
(Mmself by inheritance in possession of opportanity for escape, She had toiled |. They are buy in as large quantities | Another becoming shape for dress oc- Sea Company w statient@e ' fever she
¥ . : p as possible, thereby getting a reduc. casions has a wide brim, which droops pris ' t Margaret W aT never leave
@ fortune. He resolved to put off the through snow or over frozen waters to tan Tae things in m son “whe n they yo ‘Gale charming count home witl
Bractice of his profession for a more some country, Sweden probably, where gre ‘cheapest. ok pe ‘prices soar Oxford paged Revd: aiinen tet Seats that 1 DRY
panel Al Deir cocie ecaee So sbe had arrived hungry, frostbitten, search your cook book and household f nd. fA \ Se tiriie ; ; r
t to Europe and “did” all coun- more nearly dead than alive. And now magazines for ‘‘eggless recipes.”, Was to improve public credit and to .
tries, winding up with Russta, that she was free the was consumed Make a systematic collection of econo- provide for the floating debts few 1 iy jipsiseay deat de
After doing Warsaw, Moscow and St. by one all absorbing passion-revenge. mical nutritious dishes. at that time amounted e to $60,. left to e, busy
Petersburg he concluded to go into the And here the presence in Paris of the When eggs are high in making 600,000. In 1 1 mpar deed, she ! !
country and see something of Russian man who stood for all this wrecking, doughnuts boil and mash a good-sized { rewar ' to have ( ¢
rural life. the emperor of Russia, furnished a potato, beat it in with the sugar and t} le S the ‘ i t
One day while walking on the main climax, Lee the doughnuts as usual without y | v i
atreet, or road, rather, running through 3 . : any Sess. o be rete . Y otl ds, she f
@ Vilingze, he saw what otearea to a oun A pth 0 <b 5 tb _ In making pumpkin or squash pies Sou A Bite, Frode 4 eens re
a crowd in the distance moving toward ne girl must have gone out by an- in-place, of eggs roll crackers fine and | had Dressing: |
: , i other door, probably to avoid him. Dis- use as much of them in bulk as you | t ‘ I ( be
him, When it came up he saw it was) appointed, he was about to go to his would of eggs. You could not tell expected that the peo; of it at time
one of those sid processions of prison. room when a servant approached him the difference if you did not know, | country would be as r t Hf ex f !
ers on their way to Siberia. Virst’ and handed him a bit of paper, Open- When you want pudding for dinner rading gold an i \\ i have or f €
ing it, he read: and have no milk try adding another the Indians in giving ¢ \ " de ‘ ;
May 1 ask that you will join me for a °88 and a few more raisins and use LL Tiled lS Pt | ; . ’
few minutes in my private parlor? warm water in place of milk. beads and ot \ plate
“Most assuredly,” were the words Beef loat is anne dish in which the ine hPa + i you .
that came to him, but he did not speak cheaper cuts of meat are never recog: nada. | rea |
" ‘ nized. To make it take one and one- peop ally I j j '
them. He simply followed the servant, jayr , upfuls of stale breadcrumbs or i f oO must t ‘
who led him to a door, knocked and gracker crumbs, two pounds of ground would qu i i !
left him. The door was thrown open. beef, three teaspoonfuls of salt, sea- rh ar v y ‘ t
and before bim stood the woman who soning to taste. Mix with water or
had occupied bis thoughts for two water and milk, using as much as you
; 6
¢ & ell t at y ! i | Fi “ t te ( «
years, She shut the door behind him can, and have the meat hold together. a3 : a i $2,500. Kveryone who 1 * ; nile fa 4 ‘ ms
and stood for a few moments as if Bake about one hour in a bread tin. iS fis sufficient money together 4 5 t !
1 first at $500, but spe
« € ( a
striving for composure. Then she said Thicken the liquid left in the pan for e dee ine it aan to t last crumb Margaret begau
in a low, unsteady voice, as if fearing Oe ork in: batter i¢ ancthercgend saa WHITE OSG Bt eel geal mae 5 ms ee’ Ye Ta ats ih : . ppm
to be overbeard, “I have sent for you to employ the cheap meat. Make 4 of England, dimnounting: to $t ' Cowl re vou will have an
to ask you not to mention to any one paitar of one ege beaten with one- slightly. The crown and upper brim (0, on a five 7 cent. | \ won't y
having seen me on my way to Kara.” third cupful of milk and enough flour ®T¢ Made of white yedda. ‘The under wit said of the era Ever No, thank you, really, Marg
“L certainly will not mention it,” to make the consistency of pancake brim has a black velvet facing edged a a | P ‘ “Oh. a e 1 ne {
Borden replied. “On the contrary, is batter. Fry some slices of salt pork! With knife plaited valenciennes Jace, or f t rid of t tr) ve Do ke ¢ , ny, O
there anything I ean do for you?’ until they look clear and are begin. A wide piece of black velvet ribbon en- " : "i h y didy ike my ‘
“There is. Engage passage for me to ning to crisp, then dip ‘in the batter’ circles the side crown and is finished '! mpe It evdid!” I ! ‘ P
America as your sister or some other until well covered. Return to hot fat at the left side back in a soft knot. " m et ou : ; , : for Mars "
relative.” until well done. Serve with baked he ends are drawn over the edge of pren h ae } i line I But, tr :
“IT will do so with pleasure. When potatoes. tt ne | the brim and tied again ten inches Quiet. changed Page gi sepacnsa Ys Well, it was all off. Margaret
do you wish to sail and from what ‘Lamb Ste Cenresene ae oe from the ends. One large red rose is tlool i r! Se ei VT19 d, wistfu mile vi i
Sando tractive way to serve up cold lamb a . 1 a. a ‘ 1 l
ports and is tasty and economical. Mince a| Secured to the right side front of the the South Sea stock began ‘ ides emplpaetipt be oes 4
“As to your first question, it depends. green pepper after the seeds are re- brim. A chic little hat with crown of and it looked as if the bubble » didn't on we fy | ;
As to your second, Cherbourg will prob- moved and half a small onion and, rainproof malines and brim of black going to burst. S John B A . d have ‘en al i
ably be the best for me. Engage a cook them together in two table.) velvet is this model by Ora Cne, the o'er big men I con ie a n't neein to re Aa
room for the next steamer. If 1 am spoon of butter for tive minute man milliper, The malines is shirred : ar Then ey crxer nice a ca ay bere exists
not ready to leave (ben I must take the Stir in four tablespoonfuls of flour.! over cable cords, which gives the ef- ' ! rere Sa y to the d } ;
next later.” When it is well blended add a fect of plaiting, and an aigret of the (7°) 'Y ‘aarre 1 ¥: wall tanletion tathe orettest term 4
“If lam to trust you it is but right cupful of stewed and strained toma-! malines is the only trimming. +4 } othe ies sat ¥ thonkh vere enlall peddle
that you should trust me. ‘Tell me your wes end & cup! i) of the liquor in : apes With @ etlawes: olctheck g » expressed the e meaving by
atone: which the lamb was cooked, or, if it L CHILD'S iET ; Cokin caggplg Aer Se saa co al nats: :
HER EYES MEE WIS. She did so, and he had been ri angels late i rbdle geoe Mr SCHOO DIET. Englasd went to pieces, 1 ee wraccuret’’
She +? ne had been right In water or good gravy thinned a little. | eee oO} ne day Marg \
came a line of soldiers marching “route _ his surmises as far as they went. Her Cook till the mixture is smooth and {mpertance of This Health Factor “ EN ~oe: : ing of new spriug frocks, and I was
step.” then criminals, politicals, men, fate had made a madman of her fa- thick, season to taste with salt and Often Overlooked by Parents. aio ie +m eas Ak aii Sa oat foolish enough to say that | was think-
women and some who were scarcely , ther. Heraerother had gone to Kara, pepper and turn in two cupiuls °') he mother who wishes to preserve bors of Parliament wh ware i ing of changing my dressmaker
more than children, Among the latter and bad arranged for and effected her ona one py bag eke La ops the health of the school child must at- “tors were expelled fr that august *The very chance for you to try the
was a girl of about eighteen.” That escape. Bot he was killed by, the hbllow: ia a medea fst Lio} boiled A tend carefully to the question of diet. ody and \heir property cor little woman who made my g a
she was a political was apparent from guards In doing so. Her mother had ahd turk si ekoaicinto ‘and over it.| Zhe child at school is giving out en-, cated in proportion to tieir guilt | gow he's so smart sud so chear
her features, which marked reiine- died of grief induced by the family mis- Beef Liver Lyonnaise Procure ergy all the time, and food is requisite ‘/'U°Ts Wé CVerey 3 i son She lives a Ihere, I've forgotten
ment, intellect and character. HOFLUROS: about a pound and a half of beef liver,| to provide energy for the work “iy bagel noaghBagehs killed Pcp DUG 2.22. 100% IUD 1B Any ACCLeSs HOO
Yo see any one in the strong arm of “And now,” said Borden after she ‘sjjow it thin and lay it in a wide frying The child requires a good deal of fat, "i % Ae | “saa 8 aap Nees os and let_you know.”
the law is sud, but to sce a girt on the had given a synopsis scarcely more de- pan, sprinkle with salt and pepper pecause fat provides energy, keeps the | 4,,),),) ; : P Now, as a matter of fact, I don't
very threshold of life trudging along tailed than this, “you sre here in Paris and two tablespoonfuls of clive oil.) »podgy warm and is necessary during i ; by 1 M t r ‘ " e
through snow, with armed men ready for revenge.” When ready to cook, put the pan on time of growth, Butter, cream a om De ¢ d Dick dit w a “shriek
to shoot her if she attempts to get That he had divined her secret was & brisk fire and brown the 1 ver nice- rich milk provide fat in easily digested t heavilv w th tha of fasbion
away, ber destination the terrible mines evident from the stare she gave him ly on both re ' on the aENCE ada form. ‘Ibe schoolboy’s craving for suet ould ving to be f re vely
of Kara, on the Arctic ocean, is enough and a nervous shudder that passed ey | is 7 My aint, p ths aN ae dumplings is physiological In the sense heme, for | vere too big ! looked at Margaret and replic Dow's
to freeze the blvod In one’s heart. | over her. Almost in a whisper Borden Tors Pop BORE the fire till a ler that suet provides avimal fat in a pa st F Ss lor sucn & | bothe L think } | '
While Borden was looking at her she added: +h arianeidl va tablespoonful of flour and ticularly suitable form for the scho¢ nsid i Vil zive Mme. Blank anott hance
raised her eyes and met his, and so “You are here to assassivite the 4° tabjespoontul of chopped parsley.) room menu. Porridge and cream, white RR Ye vut 1 may as have the
great was the sympathy she saw in czar.” Stir and mix well anl add a cupful fish, soft boiled or scrambled egg, va Against Clerical Voice. addre nayn't y 4nd Im going
them that she returned it by an expres Whether it was that the danger, the of hot water. When these are smooth! rjed with fat bacon, and a cup of cocoa Four bi ps expre i t to her tl week, and if she say ®
sion of gratitude. Borden would have horror of it all, was suddenly revealed and boiling return the liver to tt or milk provide a variety of choice nt he Upy H in fake any m ¢ s
walked on that he might continue to to her; whether it was that ber secret frying pan and make it very hot. AY) breakfast. The breakfast meal sh« *s a 1 f y t f of
look at her, but the sight was too sad, had been so readily divined, causing | Tange it on a hot platter and pour 1. visied as much as possible. A lit 2 He ne, O ‘ d be be
and he feared to be considered obtru- | her to realize that ber design was im- , the sauce over it and neg 10 the table fruit may be served in season it ; ef 4 2 Aa ter for 3 " P
sive, so he remained standing where | practicable, does not matter. Possibly Wit) 4 dish of pared potatoes of porridge. Brown bread may occa- | training has Rint ap M Margaret ways f i
he was (ill the melancholy procession she did not know herself; possibly it ip rig sionally be given instead of while. | tur voice pul ading and kuow ‘ aise be pes to led
had passed, then gazed after them till | was a transfer of the burden she bore er White Afi fib , Rolls or scones or oatmeal cake, with | pul neak ] { ‘ é ;
they disappeared, a dark spot on the to one who sympathized witb ber. Her The Berbers vho, although Afr 41), | tresh preserves, are excellent fur break- | a ne ry pr ary lirement | temporized by ving, “1 hink it
white snow in the distance. frame shook convulsively; then, throw- Fe & whi ©.98 Europea ae mel ienat r admis ) ats over
Borden went back to St. Petersburg, | ing herself back in her chair, she gave ba oo Uhnekere Povey a 4 a Re Pan AiinancAvele cit chicken, peat The Bishoy ‘ ter conder And so we went op everyt t
wmable to throw off a sadness induced way to passionate sobs. oanin “6 a tha aouth at } n an.| lamb or mutton, with such vege leg | 02 “we oh 1 ‘ Many a ? : are SRY ERT
by the distressing sight of persons go-! Borden deemed the last of these sup’ cient days, The Dundee J riiser!} as potato, cauliflower, spinach, vegeta nites Py spr YA } ¢ ‘ ihe «
ing to a doom far worse than death, positions correct and permitted her t | says, and, although their } ge| ble marrow, followed by milk pudding, | -)) iin Sete \ © f { ner aw f e
and passed through the city, delaying | take ber time to decline from being § and customs are entirely different light pastry, chocolate shape or egg jogs or < } sas } has si ene ) t dear
only long enough to pick up baggage | strung to the highest pitch to a normal | from ours and their religion Moham- eystard as a sweet, may be given 2 t ni iH id does me we
he had left there and be sure that his | relaxeduess. Then, reaching forward, | medan, they are probably ch Fresh fruits in their season should be shit el at y t ; \\ ! fi x
passport was in proper condition. Then he took her band in bis and said: akin by descent suc eyes and fHir) oi von iwo or three times a week at Ph } said, ! Why dor L fake | \
he started on bis way to a@ more con-| “For two years you have never for | bail are nob ab all un Oommen among | least for dinner, and baked apple with tiv i t ng ti ea fi \ ! ‘
gevial climate and a land with a less|@ day been absent from my mind. | we Restore, one many ce eye! creamejs an eusily digested sweet for , Td J wish, ¢ co OO. fioket f
despotic government. Kheavep bas sent me to befriend you Nevinan shat: Sine ‘ii y dressed in| children ee ESAT Arve’ tropehaay : fav ay | en !
One thing he did not forget during | Let me bear your burden. This meet- | piiich fashion they would easily pass Phe school child bas generally only | oy | fas itatnets , ‘ i t
the rest of his stay in Europe nor after | ing has brought a change for us both. | a. patives of the British Isles . three meals a day, so that tea should F sn y . ne do ‘mans I
his return to America—the face and fig- | I see for you, if not a bappy future, at esha 28 ecb be a more ample mea! than that a} 1 , i oi ading | don't pi
ure of the convict girl on her way to least one of comparative comfort. | Remorse. lowed for grownups. Plenty of bread’ <f the jesse ad Vie o ’
He could not shake off the mel- | Give up this mad design and let M@ {| upor iwo years after | was au! and buiter, with heney or homemade | mn melan y 1 in ‘ ; ae cali i
ancholy procession, especially the one help you, plan for you, that you may | y was ashamed to meet the pre er| jelly, a Hitle stewed fruit if it has not hu t y. we find > ‘ ‘ vy We
person in it who had returned so pa- | gradually throw off a terrible past and | who united iny wife and me in 1! been served at dinner or breakfast and —-—-—— — : P u
thetically his look of sympathy. He take on a more inviling future.” j holy bonds. You see, in my excited | oceasionally a scrambled egg or cheese A Witty Cadi. tow Won't 1) { (
took an office, swung out his shingle as | Borden in telling the story added: condition 1 made a blunder and gave) custard, provide a nourishing tea when The gallows w be my I'm Do 1 remeiwl m Welle °
an attorney and tried to work, but cll- | ‘There is an undercurrent to this ex- hime a five-dollar bill instead. of $20 Cnidven have the appetite to digest it ry pa nate said a young w ; i 7 d
ents were not to be had without an ef- | perience that no words can properly | which Lt intended to hand him. 11 1. ust not be forgotten, however, that man ¥ applied to M Hedderwick | penile ue to
fort, and, having a fortune, there was | express, Yet without it my story | suppos he the usht I was a che aD to compel a child who is not hungry to at North London P Court for) gary } ts |
little inducement for him to make it. | would be like salt without savor, It skate, P at a Pir ey ety radi. | tuke a large meal will only overtax the | * SWnsons against # ine assault a fe , said Sam. “She'll
However, he stayed on for a couple of , would have been merely an episode. | td co akanine litte. . 5 fea that) digestion and may be the use of \ i ' 0 he
years, then gave it up and returned to | Had it not been for that of which L) 1 can lying about it,” school dyspepsia. A tumblerful of wilk , - a re ent \ ,
Europe, speak this girl, suffering from a mad- “You say you felt that way for two! at bedtime is the best “supper” for the |) SS hose wor way é
Borden when abroad at times stopped — ness to which she had been driven by years?” ‘ younger schoo! children at least. Afler ’ ee and | into my d 1 tarel home fre
at pensions instead of hotels, At the | a cruel fate, would bave shunned me “Yes. After that I began to be curry eleven or twelve years of age most s Mi ‘
former he made acquaintances, while | instead of calling on me to come to T had given him anything school boys aud girls will want bread ri iwht to be l« er. Elsa. how you w n e
at the latter he usually passéd his un- | her when we met in Paris. Whether SE — and butter in addition for supper. - the Spar 1 , ‘ nd dig PA n making
occupied time alone. One day on arriy- | she would bave tried to carry out her The Tides co el dnc sal : risl ple ar a Astana Aalih Tine b¢ Informal
ing at Paris he stopped at a pension at desperate intention I do not know. The tides are nothing but very ie Hike Barainks hi { g- chafing I nd
which he was accustomed to put up | But one thing 1 know~owing to this | Waves, and the manner in which they If you wish to embroider silk stock oe SF 4! ine e, ‘ of i d white
when in that city. What was the year | undereurrent of which I speak, taken | Tun around the earth without the v ings try the following plien instend of ; | 7 \ toweling
the czar of Russia visited the French | with our meeting, she was brought to ¢! be ane Ne ars 4 mi pe . oe aad halite Ff Stbidaie Nicoh Tike! xan: ile laa 5 - a : ‘teal
eople and became their ally. Indeed, | look upon what she bad bad in mind rl eee rare? Oo oe ps {amet tat anaiioshe stacking ané’ coisc ans ) , ehiegep
e had just arrived in Paris at this] wiih horror. More than this, the min ont ‘t from end to end. ‘f hold it us though you were Sars aS Gee? areata nine jucbes square
time. Borden had gone there to wil- ; Whole current of her life as well 48 | waves go all the way, but the ro; darn, save that you should rite Sir Sydney Olivier. towellne was t
ness the festivities attending the mon- | mine was turned into smoother waters. | jies in the same place all the tit SAtafil ink in: airatol ue stocking ab Spee i rh a Gv Oliv. | Z00d looking centerpiece
arch’s reception, At dinner Borden | As she herself afterward expressed it, | - —— Simply hold it smooth over the darner jer as secretary to the Board of Agri-| mised on an oblong
sat opposite the entrance of the dining | the change was like riding Into a safe Odor of a Dead Stymie achat or to'db {harem brolders Aion aantieed & aaa aianiattan rhe edges of Voth
room and suddenly, looking up, was! harbor, leaving belind a tempest of George (who is putting at the Jast) : How Sai oe il ; in England. owing he fact that he! piece are finished with heavily padded
startled at seeing a woman enter whom | angry winds and waves. hole with the ree Pe squar he a Socialist, but ther be 1 buttonholing done with mercerized cot
he recognized at once as the girl con- | “4nd what was this hidden power? bare Te Pee Peg oe es 9 OT: ER Preparing grams * oannta question as to his fitness for the post. ! ton the shade of the blue bas
vict he had seen on her way to Siberia. | [tf flashed between her and me when FF se game) ata aed tok the tant wi pvnats es, Mire ae ts ! he gel htt BY lney Ol Wier is Lity-four years | crash, Across the center of ea
But, oh, how changed! Instead of | she was staggering in the snow on her 1 hese ed an unpleasait sme) hon fot pti * a =e i ; -“ P fa . "4 Din pty , nf i A. | ond at both ends of the runne
appearing as one just from ber teens way to Kara, when she looked up and | don Bystander stend of g Nsebed ae BOO OW Beets Oli vici W er Te Han an : ng.}, will be placed the initia
she looked as if she might be any- | saw pity in my eyes, Love, like the ; pik git acted MES Nahe A eh. per a A IDOE BO Mens Pudg ier j# 4 ae hs ; ei site?
Where between thirty and fifty. And ! electrié spark, passed from me to her South Africa's Papers jangre quickly, Bag the Cegoanehgs NEY" | BUC lohiel Gales ¢ In’ arly days | lwo sliides of Ona 4
{nstead of wearing the patient look | and from ber to me. And Nike a spark { The 247 newapapers published in} 8n0 fully, Wbis is well worth trying. | 6 an atdent Socialist, and hel» hoe plo the set la stuuning
of a martyr her face had become bard: | of electricity, little in itself, tg bas ; South Africa give casployiment t) @iaw) especialy 6 fa cara Powe ed t found the Feblau Society, 4 i f wiedersohes
ened. It seemed tu Borden, perbape } puwer to move the universe.” , Buropesne and 680 colored 4 Ie ! ety ee en bruised throngu up AN WA
« rater.
SI
—The—
Raymond Leader
evening
Published every Thursday
at Raymond
Subscription $1.59 per year payable
advance,
hanged from
“Raymond
sbhas By-Laws
Assignments,
on Notices, and
» for 12c. per line
r line.
s for discontinuing contract adver
st be handed in in writing to the
WI. Berryessa,
Publisher
B. Spence Wound
Editor and Manager
Thursday, May I 1913
=“ 7 wier OF
Tur
FARMERS SMILE.
armers of Southern Alberta
asiou to smile
ondition of the
But the heavy
y storm that started last Monday
night and fell steadily for two days
the smile t reak into a
ige and one prominent farmer
Zone
down near! three iuches Ihis
Leginuing to sprout is
invaluable and if the land is in the
yn will go a long way
to insuring the crop as far as mois-
concerned, The green prar
ies and budding tree,
ture is
sun shine over
earth beneath
head anda
the feet, offer
spongy
an encouragiug out-
e people who are trying
to make their living from this fair
earth of ours
AMOUNT OF SEED
PER. ACRE.
Amount of seed to sow per acre
Alfalfa, 15 t» 25 ibs,
barlev, 8 to 10
is as follow
broadvast or drill;
pecks; blue grass, 25 lbs; brome
grass, 12 to 20 lbs; Buckwheat, |
hus.; clover, 16 Ibs corn, 10
irts; oats, 2 to 3 bus; orchard
ra 30 Ibs peas, 2 bus.; red
top, 10 lbs; rye 3to6 pecks;
6to9 peck asparagus,
Ib : I% bu beets, 6
] ab *4 |b one ounce
equals 2,000 plants; carrot, 4 lbs;
cau'iflower, 4 lb: celery, % |b;
14 bus; cucumber 2 Ibs;
lettuce, I Ib;
cow peas
kale 4 lb equal
ling '4 ounce to 50 feet of 10Ww;
musk melon, 3 lbs; water melon
4 lbs ; millet 1 to 3 pecks;
5 Ibs 1, ounce to 50 ft
onions
equaling
fOW; parsnips, Olbs; potatoe
8 to 12 bus; equalling 25 tuber per
50 foot row; pumpkins, 5 Ib;
spinach. 12 Ibs,;
feet;
radish, 10 lbs.;
equaling '4 ounce to 50
squash, 4 to6 Ibs ;
114 to 4 bus;
33 plants in So feet; turnips 4 Ib.
or 4 ounce to fifty feet of row
Canadian Farm
sweet potato,
tomato '4 Ib, or
No Interest
HIGH
Each
DR
Miscellaneous.
How can the boys and girls be
kept upon the farm? The state
of lowa bas shown that a common
sense public school education can
make the children not only con-
tented with farm life but anxious
that
to follow above any other
calling. The results of teaching
agriculture and home economics
in 34 schools in Wright County,
lowa, show that before these sub-
jects were taught 157 boys were
Wanting to leave the farm and
only 7 were willing to stay, while
163 girls wanted to leave the farm
and Ittostay. After agriculture
and home economics were taught
the proportions were justreversed.
Only 12 leave
boys wanted to
the farm to 162 who wanted to
stay, and only 17 girls wanted
to leave the farm to I61 who
the Public
Schools of the Prairie Provinces
wanted to stay. Ar
doing their duty in stemming the
current from the land to the
towns and cities,
American consumers will have
only 2 cents instead of 5 cents
duty ona dozen
eggs imported
from Canada after the proposed
revision goes into effect. Canad-
ain Consumers, on the other hand
tariff
relief, to judge from the scant re-
have slight prospects of
gard being paid
the politicians of
ast year
to economic
questions by
Ottawa I
itis estim-
ated, over dozen
Canada
upen which a duty of three cents
a dozen, or $226,000
How much the consumer
seven million
Cees were imported into
was paid
had to
pay in addition to this duty, only
those know who will not tell. The
leveling of artificial obstructions
to the free interchance of food-
stuffs between the two countries
would benefit the people of both
hiations
We here plenty these days
about the high cost of living, but
not so much about the high cost
of selling. Yet it has been care
fully estimated by some American
authorities including B. F. Yoak-
um, chairman of the St, Louis
and San Francisco Railroad, that
it cost $7,000,000,000 last year
ts distribute $6,000,000,000 worth
of farm produce tothe consumers
of the United States, That is for
every $1.00 paid for farm produce
the farmer realized only 49 cents
while the middlemen and rail-
roads and = other distributing
agencies took the remaining 54
cents as their share. Seven dol-
lars is a pretty big toll to pay
for distributing six dollars worth
of produce
There is an endless amount of
nousense being written nowadays
about the benerits Canada will
get in consequence of the lower-
ing of the American Tariff. The
simple truth is that our neigh
bors have decided to lower the
cost of living by doing away
with some of their tariff taxes
It would not huit Canada it many
of our own tariff taxes were
abolished or reduced.
No Taxes.
Y AND
$1. Per Week Invested in Bossano will start you
on the Road to Fortune. — Full Sized Lots $60.
Nothing Down $1. Per Week.
Lots Guaranteed
LEVEL
It means cement of the highest possitle quality.
It means cement tested by experts whose authority is final at all our mills.
of farmers to fulfil every requirement of scientifically made Portland cement.
for a concrete watering trough.
with complete confidence that your concrete {work will be
You ought to have this confidence
facilities for testing ite qualities, such as are atthe disp:
big contracting jobs.
These engineers know that when cement has passed the tests made upon it
You can use
Canada Cement
thoroughly satisfactory,
ause you have not the
ssal of the engineers in charge of
in the cement you use, bee
Cement mills, it will pass all their tests. : : 4
And this same cement is rold to you for your silo, your foundations, your feeding-floor,
your milk-house or your watering-trough.
Used accordin
to the ‘directio
Cement never tails to give eat
and place concrete, but will a
tory results, Write forthe book
uu wg, ores of uses forit ony
28 "
to you. In asking tor the book you do got incur the slightest obligation
There ie a Canada Coment Dealer in Your Neighborhood
Farmers’ Information Bureau
Address:
in our free book “What the Farmer can do with Concrete,
t not only tella you, ho
our farm, eve ne of them valu
Real
ARN EOE
ill
at Canada
Canada
to mix
able
Canada .Cement Company Limited, Montreal
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CORNER CAFIE.
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IS THE PLACE TO GET
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MEALS and LUNCHES
served at all hours.
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all newsdealers.
MUNN & Co,serero-0w, New York
rauch Office, 625 F &t., Washington, D. ©,
Sold by
B. C. CAFE
We carry a full line
of tobacco, candy and
soft drinks.
SESONABLE FRUIT
OUR SPECILITY
Meals served at
all hours.
DONGCHO, Prop,
ie
|
oy iy td
Par Aa
the Metzger Vitalizei
Battery Co.
OUR CUSTOMERS
with
service, our delivery, our
are so satisfied
market, and
more important
OUR FINE MEATS
clean
that they soon become reg: |
ular patrons. Soon their!
friends hear about it and
come regularly, too,
“Presa Fish Every Tuurspay”’
PIEPGRASS. BROS.
PHONE 17.
FOR CASH
our |
still |
It means cement acknowledged by engineers, architects and hundreds of thousands
It means a cement that is absolutely reliable, whether used for a great bridge or
William Klein
Estate Investments
215-217 Lougheed Bldg.
Calgary, Alberta,
INSURANCE
LIFE, Sickness, Accident, Lia-
bility, Fidelity, FIRE, Hail. Grain
Burglary, Plate Glass, and
LIVESTOCK,
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MONEY TO LOAN
Commisioner for Oaths.
J. R. Revill,
617 Fourteenth St. South,
Phone 466 Lethbridge
Be LAS ah TTS, AE a)
AGENT WANTED
For RAYMOND and distriefs
| to sell tor “CANADA'S GREAT-
| EST NURSERIES,” Hardy fruit
Small Fruits, Rhubarb,
} trees,
| Seed Potatoes, Seedlings and
8 Rooted Cuttings tor Wind-breaks
f Shrubs,
Pested and recommended by
WESTERN EXPERIMENTAL
STATIONS
Evergreens, Bulbs, etc,
Highest commision paid,
Handsome free™outfiit. Send
|for PARTICULARS and Start
Now.
STONE & WELLINGTON
Toronto, Ont.
nieaiaiag
The Raymond
Saddlery Co.
G. fH. ORGAN AND SON.
Dealers in
All Kinds Of Harness,---Plain And
Fancy Bridles,---Stock And
EnglishSaddles,---Trunks
Robes,=-- Shawls And
All kinds of harness hardware
The Lowest P) iced Store In Alberta,
NO CREDIT GIVEN
OPPORTUNITY FOR
RELIABLE MAN
IN RAYMOND
A thoroughly reliable concern would
get in touch with someone well
inond and district - someone who can
inquiries and intelligently present a
proposition, References required
someone who will not misrepresent
like to
known in Ray-
follow up
high-class
must have
simply state
This is a permanent and highly profitable
position for the right man,
Apply—
Il, W. McCurdy,
502 Temple Bldg
Toronto, Ont.
LE TSE SE a eee
7»
Fo
— my
_ . THE LEADER. RAYMOND. ALBERTA.
———— CTE LEADER. RAYMOND. ALBER’ mee
THE MAHOGANY
ROOM
A Mystery Is Happily
Unraveled
By CLARISSA MACKIE
Miss Dorinda Page ushered me into
the large east bedchamber. “1 must
put you in the mahogany room,” she
apologized. “All the other rooms are
filled Just now, but you will find it cool
and pleasant here, and It’s quiet too.”
“It's delightful, Miss Dorinda, and 1
know I shall fall in love with that
bed.” I approached the mahogany
four poster and ran my finger along
the fine carving. “I suppose this is a
Page heirloom?"
“No; this room is filled with othe:
people's heirlooms. All of this furni-
ture has been bought from time to
time and placed tn this room; hence
its name.” Miss Dorinda’s slim figure
moved sedately from highboy to an-
cient dressing stand to the spindle leg-
ged table, rearranging a dimity cover,
SM vewWw
“MISS WHO?” HE ASKED BRUSQUELY.
wiping a speck of dust from a candle
stick and moving the vase of fresh
flowers out of the sunlight.
All at once she sank into a big rush
bottomed chair and became confiden-
tial. “My dear, there is something odd
about this room. Sit down in the rock-
er by the window there. I hope you
won't mind sleeping here.”
I was puzzled by ber manner, “You
mean it is haunted?’ I questioned
laughingly.
“No, hardly that.
about it. Every article of furniture in
this room was purchased from a differ-
ent family, and each time it bas been
under stress of some sort. The bed
came from the Crosbys. It belonged
to Grandmother Crosby, but the faml-
ly became hard up and parted with it. |
I needed the extra furniture to put in
this room, so I bought it. The high-
boy came from the Glenn family.
Ralph Glenn went away, the family
broke up, and | bought this highboy.
The table came from the Orvises and
the dressing table from the Chases and
this chair from the Winnicks. Some
thing queer happened in each of those
two families, but | am not at liberty to
say what it was. | thought I would tell
you the history of the furniture, so
that you might be prepared to see all
sorts of spirits at the mystic bour of
12." She looked at me from
bright, keen eyes, as if testing the
quality of my courage.
“I always read until midnight, Miss
Dorinda,” | explained frankly, “and if
spirits want to walk in lamplight they
won't disturb me a particle.”
Miss Dorinda smiled cheerfully. “1
am glad," she said simply, “that you
are so sensible. Mrs. Stone occupied
the room one night and declared she
didn't sleep a wink for the whisper-
ing. I told her it was the coffee she
drank before she went to bed. 1 will
send up a tray of supper, Miss Cam-
eron. Getting here so late in the
evening, you will want a good rest.”
The supper came up and was eaten
before a small fire sputtering on the
wide hearth, for a gentle rain was
falling outside, and it was cool in the
large mahogany chamber. | prepared
leisurely for bed, turning back the
snowy, lavender scented sheets with a
delightful sense of anticipation tn the
dreamless slumber [ should enjoy.
Contrary to my usual habit, | did vot
lie awake and read, On the contrary,
I extinguished the lamp, flung a win-
dow wide to the soft wet alr and went
to sleep, watching the flickering fire-
light against the polished mahogany
furniture. —~
I had not noticed the striking clock
in the room, but it was there on the |
mantelshelf. Ten and 11 had chimed
from its depths, but I had slept undis-
turbed. Suddenly [ sat up in bed,
awake, alert, with the last strokes of
12 sounding in my ears, The fire was
burning brightly, and I could see that
the hour was midnight. A little shiver
of dread went over me, I could not
help listening intently for those whis-
pering voices which had disturbed Mrs.
Stone the night she occupied the ma-
hogany room.
There was not a sound except the
ticking of the clock and the gentle fall
of rait; on the tiu roof of *he porch
Let me tell you |
her |
| withoat. Once the fire hissed as a
| Taindrop fell down the wide throat of
the chimney, and it was so li
per that | Jumped a little.
As I lay down once more on my pil-
low | became conscious of a peculiar
sensation,
voices, that no wraithlike forms cross-
ed my vision, yet I seemed to be
among animate things. 1 was recety-
| {ng information from some unknown
source.
I stared at the highboy, counted the
Glass knobs of the drawers, assured
myself that there was nothing but the
| Peflection of the firelight on the polish-
ed front, when all of a sudden | saw—
Out of the polished surface there
grew a picture-dark shadows for a
background of shrubbery, a winding
path bordered with flowers, and stand-
ing there was Miss Dorinda Page as
| she appeared in the large painting in
the drawing room below—Miss Dorin-
da of thirty years ago, fair and sweet
ing a rose to a youth, who looked at
| her with eyes of despairing adoration.
| He bent and kissed her in sudden, pas-
ed in the shrubbery, leaving her, white
} and trembling, to sink on a garden
bench. But he bad carried the rose
away. As Miss Dorinda leaned her
head on her rounded arm the picture
died away, and there was nothing save
the firelight flickering on the front of
| the highboy and the ticking of the
clock, interrupted by the fall of rain
| on the roof,
I was not afraid now. 1 was filled
with pity for the sweet, patient little
| Woman who had so sturdily taken up
| the burden of wage earning when she
| had been left alone. Her house of
| “paying guests” was always filled, and
| I, who had known her a dozen years,
had by great good luck been placed in
the mahogany room and thus stumbled
, upon the romance In Dorinda’s sad life.
The face of the young man was not
unfamiliar, and | was sure that I had
seen It, older, graver, somewhere. The
story of the highboy was clear to me
now. It had belonged to Ralph Glenn's
people, and it was for his sake she had
purchased the heirloom. Ralph Glenn
must have been the young man of the
picture.
“Glenn—Glenn—where have I heard
| that name?” I questioned to myself as
I dropped off to sleep, and the answer
came as the morning sunlight awoke
me to consciousness. “Dr. Glenn, of
course, stupid!"
' breakfast. Then she sought me in the
big veranda, where I was studying the
rallroad time table.
“Not going home so soon?” she ex-
claimed, with a glance at my occupa-
tion. “I hope the mahogany room bas
not driven you away. You slept well?”
| “Beautifully,” | assured ber. “I must
run home for a day, and then | shail
return to lay the ghost of the mahog-
any room.”
As the stage crawled its way up the
long hill to the station I saw in my
mind's eye my home city. On one of
the handsomest streets there was a
row of brownstone houses given over
to physicians’ offices. On one of the
brass plates was the name “Ralph
Glenn, M. D.” I had met Dr. Glenn
once, and, as I recollected bis features,
, he might have been that same youth
who had taken farewell of pretty Do-
rinda Page.
There was no harm in trying, I
thought, so | made my way home and
straight out to the office of Dr. Glenn.
The physician was in, and I made my
chronic neuralgia the excuse for my
visit. When the consultation was over,
still I lingered in the office. He, quiet,
grave, middle aged, clever looking,
watched me as if questioning my de-
lay.
“IT am going away for a fortnight,” I
explained. “I'm going down to Put-
wick. Perhaps you know the village?”
His face paled, but be smiled polite
ly. “I was born there,” be said brief-
ly and then looked as if he regretted
the confidence.
“Then you must know
homestead?” | said rapidly.
where I am staying.
| charming old place, and Miss Dorinda
| Page is the most charming hostess.”
|
the Page
“That is
“Miss who?" he asked brusquely,
looking down on me from his superior
height.
“Miss Dorinda Page,” | replied inno-
cently. “She is the last of ber family
and the sweetest little woman in the
world, She’—
he burst out, sinking heavily
intoa chair. “They sent me a wedding
invitation, Here it ts!"
open a drawer, and from a leather
covered box he drew forth a yellowed
| envelope containing an engraved an-
nouncement of the wedding of Dorinda
May Page and Hugh Montgomery Gra-
bam on April 1, 1890.
“I'm afraid you are the victim of a
joke, an ill timed and fateful April
foo! trick,” I said regretfully as | point.
ed to the date’ “Whoever perpetrat-
ed the joke did not spare expense. Ag
a matter of fact, Hugb Graham mar-
ried Miss Dorinda’s cousin, Hanuoah
ham,”
Page, years ago, long before | knew |
You never went back to Put
| wick?"
“No; I stayed away after that.”
“I'm going back to Putwick tomor-
| row,” | suggested
“So am I,” he exclaimed, rising to
“Just
as soon as | can put my affairs in or-
| der here I'm going. You are sure—sure
that I better go?’
| wistfully, and I could see that he, too,
|
|
|
|
| them,
|
|
his feet with sudden energy.
as well as Miss Dorinda, had yet to
live out that interrupted romance.
“Sure as—as I am that the ghost of
the mahogany room has been laid,” I
| said eagerly, but he was not lstening
| tome, His thoughts were far away in
| that southern garden where he would
} once more meet Dorinda Page.
It was troe that 1 heard no |
and very shy. She was timidly offer. |
sionate farewell, turned and disappear. |
I did not see Miss Page until after ,
It is the most.
“Il thought she married Hugh Gra- |
He pulled |
1 read it slowly, |
He looked at me |
BORDEN AS A TEACHER,
Him Many Years Ago.
When the Right Honorable R. L.
Borden was nineteen years old he
went down from his Nova Scotia home
to become a teacher in the Glenwood
Institute, says Anson A. Gard in The
Toronto Star Weekly. Th , and pos-
sibly still, the teachers and older
j Scholars had a reading and debating
society that met once a week. The
| principal feature of the program was
| the giving out of a book to a member,
'to be read and at the next meeting
reviewed by him or ler. Now be it
remembered that in those days the
lady teachers were a fun-loving lot of
|
when “taking a rise’ out
| popular new member of the reading
}club, Young Borden was at once in-
| Vited to join, and readily consented,
for even then he loved debate. Al-
most his first assignment was the read-
ing and reviewing of Harriet Beecher
Stowe’s “My Wife and J in which
appear the characters: ‘My Child
| Wife,’ “‘My Dream Wife,” and ‘My
| Re-l Wife.”
If the whole institute and half the
town did not know of the assignment
it was 1o fault of the Committee on
Books. Anticipation ran high to bear
how the young Nova Scotian would
handle the Literary polygamous sub-
ject. The attendance, the night of the
review, included practically every
| member, and enough from the town to
put standing room at a premium. No
}one wished to miss the .-n that all
| Seemed so sure would result at his ex-
pense. But they did miss it, for al-
| though but a boy, the future Premier
was not in the Yonat disconcerted by
the hundreds of eyes turned upon him |
that night.
He dealt gently with his “Child
| Wife,” and when he had finished his
review of his “Dream Wife,” many a
Jersey maiden, in that crowded hall,
sighed: “Oh! that I were
Dream!" But here he stopped. He
stopped, as all thought, from sheer
| stage fright. But it was only seem-
ing. Turning to the chair-woman, who,
j he later found, had been the suggester
of that especial book, he said: “I be-
ke a whis- How He Got Out of a Trap Laid For | i¢ ts
maidens, who were never happier than |
of some |
that |
lieve it is the custom, and our right, |
that if one be not prepared, that one |
may ask for an extension of time. I
have reviewed ‘My Child Wife,’ and
have pictured to you ‘My Dream
Wife,’ but to select and properly char- ,
acterize ‘My Real Wife,’ | must claim
| my right and ask for an extension of
time.”’
“Young man,” coyly asked the
chair-woman, “how much time do you
think you will require?”
Looking slowly over the faces be-
fore and around him, he most delib-
|erately said: ‘‘Well, from present
prospects, I think I shall have to ask
for—say—Oh, make it five hundred
and twenty weeks!’ And amid smiles,
that haven't ceased to ripple along
the sea-girt shores of Mattawan, the |
young Nova Scotian sat down. It was
the last ‘‘rise’’ that the Glenwood In-
stitute ever tried to take out of the
future Premier of Canada.
| The answer of the boy was indica-
tive of the man. It was most effective,
but it left no sting. Borden ever aims
to gain his point without offending. |
That is why some of his warmest
friends are amongst his most strenu-
ous political opponents. His “I'm glad
to see you,” like old Sir John’s, 18
not reserved for those whose political
views are his own, and when said is
always meant. More serious than Sir
}
|
John, yet he has the some kindly feel- |
ing for his people, and his people love
him.
In Canada, the feeling is general, |
amounting to a wide knowledge, that
its Premier is a man of rare discern-
ment. And never was this so mani-
fest as when, at the end of the ‘Five
Hundred and Twenty Weeks’’ he chose
the ‘‘Real,’’ whose picture was never |
more accurately drawn, and in so few
words, than by the able depicter of
the genuine in woman’s character,
who said of Mrs. Borden: ‘She has
ideas, lots of them; she understands
public questions, is a Woman's Coun-
cil worker, is keenly alive to all mat-
ters of interest or importance to wo-
men, is a splendid hostess, a devoted
wife, and a charming woman—what
more would you have?”
Prof. Field’s Theory.
A new theory of the singing of tele-
graph wires has been offered by Prof.
| Field. of the University
No explanation yet given seems
| have been perfectly satisfactory, and
the suggestion is now made that
brations, which are transmitted to the
| wires through the poles. These vibra-
| tions depend largely on varying air
pressure. The song of the wires there-
fore may give good barometric sig-
of Ottawa. |
to }
the sounds represent minute earth vi- |
nals, a sharp sound indicating that a)
| change is close at hand, while a low |
| humming shows that present condi-
tions may continue a day or perhaps
two.
Huge Bank Deposit.
MARIE ANTOINETTE’S TOMB.
Paris.”
A contributor to the Manchester
Guardian has been visiting the Cha-
| pelle Expiatoire, in the Rue des Ma-
| thurins, which he describes as “the
saddest spot in Paris.” He had got it
into his head that the remains of Louis
Seize and Marie Antoinette bad entire
ly disappeared, but be was undeceived:
| the restoration, on the site of the old
| burial ground of the Madeleine as an
| act of expiation for the horrors of the
revolution and especially for the mur.
der of the king and queen. In that
| graveyard it was that they were has-
tily buried in open coffins filled with
| quicklime., But loving eyes and hands
watched and marked the spot, and
the day came when the. poor remains
| were brought to light. Even quicklime
ed the skulls, a bone or two and—pa-
thetic detail—the elastic metal garters
| which the unhappy ‘Autrichienne’ waa
wearing when Sanson's tireless ax fell
upon her beautiful neck,
“Nor was that all. The lime had
formed a bard crust upon the open cof-
fins and around the bodies, and there
embedded lay all the rest.”
The visitor descended a flight of steps
to a subterranean chapel, dim and
chilly, and he continues:
“There before me, in a tiny circular
| space just beneath a little stained win-
dow, stood a white marble altar, En-
shrined in that altar, minus the relics
at St. Denis, lie all that cruelty and
hatred, time and nature, have left of
Louls Seize and Marie Antoinette. All
was silent, The stray visitors above
had gone. The traffic penetrated not
“This little chapel was built, after |
to this barren and almost secret cell. |
I was alone with the injured dead,
, with the Irresolute king who was his
own worst enemy, with the frivolous,
fascinating, suffering, martyred queen,
in whose behalf the 10,000 swords for
which Burke cried out in his ogony
never leaped from their scabbards—
alone with the poor remnants of per
haps the most bistoric woman in his
tory.”
| This spot ts seldom visited. “You
wonder,” says the writer, “how much
the people on the boulevard a few
yards away know or care about it all.”
HIS FIRST TASTE OF WAR.
The Time When Schley Was Almost
Scared to Death,
“The late Admiral Schley admitted
In conversation with me one afternoon,
sitting on the veranda of an Atlantic
City hotel, that the first time he was
under fire he was frightened almost to
death,” remarked Victor Murdock of
Kansas,
“When Admiral Farragut at Mobile
bay boarded my ship I was a young
| officer,’ said Admiral Schley, ‘and tn
the height of the battle the captain of
my vessel was killed. I suddenly
found myself face to face with a sit-
uation which for the moment seemed
to take away all of my nerve.
“IT was in a moment elevated to the
command of a battleship in actual en-
gagement. If I had been unnerved by
the shot and shell before, | was al-
most terrified at that instant
midst of my predicament—for that ts
what it amounted to—Admiral Farra-
gut boarded the ship. 1 do not know
what thought came to him when he
saw me, for my face must have be
trayed my fear.
“‘Just at that moment a shell whiz-
zed across the deck, cutting a line as
cleanly as if it bad been done by a
chisel. Varragut turned around to me
and sald: “Lieutenant, let's take our
stand on this line. They say that
lightning never strikes twice in the
same place.”
“I was mighty glad to follow,’ said
Admiral Schley. ‘Farragut stood there
with the shells bursting all around, and
I shall never forget how big and grand
be appeared.’”—Washington Post.
Lion For Dinner.
On Christmas, 1874, a curious dinner
took place in Paris. Some score of com
tributors and draftsmen of the Chasse
Iilustree dined at Magny’s restaurant
onder the presidency of M. VFirmin
Didot, the publisher, to taste the ham
and heart of the last lion killed in Al-
geria by Constance Cheret. The flesh
was found to be particularly firm and
close grained, like that of a horse, but
nevertheless quite palatable. The ham
was preferred to the heart, which, al-
though skillfully prepared with truf-
files, was pronounced somewhat tough
and difficult of digestion.
What is claimed to be the largest)
deposit ever made in a single bank in
one day was entered at the Canadian
Bank of Commerce in Sarnia the oth-
er day when the stockholders of the
| Imperial paid into the company the
first of their money on the recent in-
| crease of the capital to the $15,000,000
mark. The deposits for the day to-
| talled $6,400,000.
increased by a further amount later.
Babe With Three Hands.
Maggie Smeaton, an Acadian woman
living near Amherst, N.S8., has given
birth to a child with three hands,
| one of them being developed from the
wrist of the other. A thumb was at
| tached to the ear of the child.
The infant is quite healthy and an
operation will be performed to rid it
| of its superfluous hand and thumb
Emergency Bridges.
Part of the Cossack soldier’s drill
consists in building bridges from
| lances, with cooking kettles as floats.
|
| Not That Kind,
“The real poet is always a seer.”
“Maybe, but he’s very seldom a
financier.’
‘
Mighty Texas.
“Texas Is a big state,” remarked the
bative. “A man from the eastern part
of the state is a southerver; a man
| from the other side of the state ts a
The amount will be |
‘
westerner.”
. “How about a man from the north:
erp part of the state?”
“He's a Yankee.”—Loulsyille Courier
Journal.
Another Mystery Explained,
A woman frequently changes her
mind. That's why she is able to give
@ person a piece of it and still always
have enough left for the next one—
Milwaukee Sentinel
Interpreted,
“That tramp talks funny, ma'am
He says he castigated his itinerary
from Boston.”
“He only means he beat his way."—
Baltimore American,
Inherited,
Pa-—Son, you talk too much, Son-
Well
crying inte a talkative
Prapseript
faually ?—Bostor
ja am I to blame for your mar |
In the ,
COST OF A COCKTAIL.
Located In “the Saddest Spot In The Drink a Young Business Man Had
to Have Before Lunch.
In New York city there ia a man
who once paid $6,000 for a cocktail.
He did not know it then, and he never |
will know it unless he happens to read
this story.
A certain prosperous manufacturing
company needed a new departmental
manager. The salary was $6,000 a
year. The officers of the company
considered a great many candidates
and at last decided to offer the position
| to a clever young man of unusual bust-
ness ability, He seemed to be exactly
the man for that particular place. The
president and general manager invited
the young man to lunch with them at
a downtown club, ostensibly to talk
over a less important business matter.
They wanted to “look him over’ just
| once more,
is not all powerful, and there remain. |
The man met them at the appointed
hour, and the president, anxious to
make the occasion a pleasant one, or-
dered an elaborate luncheon. The
waiter was a long time in bringing
the first course, and the guest began
to appear fll at ease. THe seemed ab
sentminded and uninterested in the
conversation. He twisted about in bis
chair and tapped his fingers nervously
upon the table. Finally be turned to-
ward the president and said almost
desperately, “Would you mind very
much If I ordered a cocktail?” Then
he flushed a little and offered a laugh-
ing apology for making the request.
The other men exchanged surprised
and significant glances, but they called
the waiter and ordered the cocktail.
When it came the guest drank it ea-
gerly. In a few moments he bad be-
come another man—the man of keen
vision and quick mind, who could be
60 useful tn their great business. There
was no more preoccupation in his man-
ner, no shifting about in his chair. He
was alert, eager, clear headed,
But as the luncheon went on neither
the president nor the manager men-
tioned the real object of the interview.
Each was thinking the matter over se
riously, and neither could be sure of
the other's secretly formed opinion.
The situation became awkward. Final-
ly the president excused himself on
the pretense of going into the library
to speak to a friend who had just en-
tered. But after speaking to his friend
he went straight to the desk and wrote
& message on a telegraph blank. He
gave the message to a uniformed at-
tendant and went back to the dining
room.
In a few minutes a page brought a
telegram to the manager, who read It
hurriedly, while the president finished
telling their guest about a shooting
trip in Maine. This is what the tele
gram sald:
The job ts too big for a boozer. We
can't run our business by cocktail power.
—Youth's Companion.
Working Up a Joke.
A regular amateur jester broke past
the guards and got into our office yes-
terday, He came for the purpose of
making us bite on some of his prepar-
ed catches. We hate to discourage
genius, and also we weren’t extremely
clever, so we took the card he forced.
Here’s the way he did it:
“Of course you hate adulteration. I }
bave found that many of the wines
are watered. Now, what do you think
of watering wine?”
“It’s a gross swindle.”
> <b ud
“Yes. And what do you think of
putting sand into sugar?”
“It’s a grocer swindle. Ha, hal Ha,
ha, ha, h-a-al’ — Cleveland Plain
Dealer,
An Artist's Record Rapidity,
As an instance of the amazing rapidl-
ty and ease with which a Japanese art-
ist works Mr. M. B. Huish, tn “Japan
and Its Art,” quotes the marvelous
achievement of Fuku! Kotei, who was
selected to exhibit his prowess before
Prince Arthur of Connaught when the
prince was in Japan on the Garter mis-
sion. In one summer day, working
from sunrise to sunset, he painted a
picture for each of 1,224 guests to be |
entertained that evening!
ed with two brushes.
Kotei work-
Oiling the Swamps,
The oil that is distributed through
the swamps of Panama to prevent the
crops of mosquitoes which made things
so unpleasant Is sent on Its errand ina
novel fashion, At the head of every
little watercourse an oil tank ts placed
that gives its oil drop by drop. When
the sudden showers come, as they do,
in bucketfuls, the water flows off the
higher lands into the swamps, carrying
a coating of oil where it is most need-
ed.—Christian Science Monitor,
Contentment.
Tt {s sald that John D. Rockefeller
was once asked by an ambitious
young woman, a schoolteacher, for an
infallible recipe for contentment. The
oil king promptly aud forcefully re
plied:
“Never borrow trouble and never
lend money.”
The Other Way.
“When I put on this diamond circlet
upon your finger, my darling, | am io
one way sealing my doom.”
“Dear me! You frighten me!
50?"
How
) He
“I am ringing the Nell of my Geareat |
hopes."—Baltimore American,
She Knows.
Father—Katherine, | wish you'd ask
that young Mr. Spooner why he doesn't
go home earlier, Daughter—But, papa,
I know why he doesn’t already,—Bos. ,
ton Transcript,
Giving alms never lessens the purse.
Spanish Proverb
—_o____—,
SS
DENIED HIM A KISS
|
And Rubinstein Repaid Her With
a Torrent of Melody.
MOODS OF THE GREAT MASTER
The Climax to an Evening With the
Composer In His Home In St. Peters-
burg, When His Efforts at the Piane
Left Him Ashen Faced and Exhausted
In her “Recollections of Rubinstein,”
published in Harper's Magazine, Lik
lian Nichia throws some new tights om
the character and temperament of one
of the famous composers of the last
century. Her earliest acquatntance
with Rubinstein was when, as a child,
she resided with her parents In Dub
lin, She afterward traveled with bim
during an English tour that the com-
poser made and met him again in St
Petersburg at a rehearsal, when the
great master dinner that
same evening. 1uthor says:
“| spent the the afternoon
practising, and a little before 6 o'clock
found myself at last In Rubinstetin’s
study amid all his intimate associa-
tions, tonching the books and music
that belonged to him, sitting before
the piano he played on, glancing over
the pages of manuscripts that he had
just finished—in short, at home with
bim. I found then that he was no
longer the sphinx man of the concert
platform, but a genial, gracious host,
asking after the friends I had recently
left in Frankfort and making Inquiries
after in Ireland and England,
especiaily after all young artists, for
whom he had a beart flowing over with
kindness and sympathy. Possibly his
own stndent days in Vienna, when
be bad literally starved, bad something
to do with this. At the dinner table
1 found out be was thoroughly a bom
vivant
“After dinner 1
the ordeal
invited ber to
The
rest of
those
had to go through
of playing for him, and,
when I had finished, his manservant
brought in a card table, and we sat
down to a game of vindt, a difficult’
fort of whist, much like present day
bridge. Rubinstein and I were part-
ters and lost shaimefully—scarcely to
be wondered at, for I had just learned
whist—hut he insisted on playing again
and again
“Matve, the servant, then brought in
tea in the long Russian glasses with
their silver holders, lemon, not cream,
being served, and one of the ladies
present, knowing | was a newcomer
and ignorant of the fact that it was
an uuwritten law as unalterable as
that of the Medes and Persians that
bis guests should not ask him to play,
whispered to me to make him .go to
the piano. Cheerfully and innocently
1 went up to bim and, running my
arm through his, said coaxingly:
“*Do come and play something!*
“His face changed in a moment. An
ominous silence fell on those present.
Even the culprit who had led me into
the trap looked disturbed, As for Ru-
binstein himself, he gave me a scowl
and fairly flung my hand away.
* ‘No,’ be said shortly. ‘l never play.
Don't forget this.’
“The sudden change fn bis manner
unnerved me, for the tears started te
my eyes, and | stood gaping at him
As a matter of fact, I was thoroughly
disconcerted and taken aback. As
sovun as Rubinstein saw this bis face
changed again, and, laughing, be held
out his band to me apologetically.
“Well, come; give me a kiss and I
will play for you!’
“| bad just reached the age
my kisses were not lightly given.
when
Be-
sides, | was cut to the beart’s core,
and I turned my head away in denial
“'What!’ cried one of the women
Present, ‘Could you refuse Anton
Gregoriewitch?
“'Yes,’ cried Rubinstein, ‘and just
for that 1 am going to play for her
anyhow, for she is the first that ever
did!’
“Rubinstein was in one of his rarest
moods, and those of us who were pres-
ent will never forget the ineffable
beauty of the Chopin F major ballade
as tie started the opening theme, one of
the wonder pieces of that composer
whom Rubinstein had designated ‘die
Seele des Fortepiano When he had
finished the ade he passed, almost
without a pause, to the preludes, four
of which he played, Then he dashed
into his favor izurka and ended
with the hero Ef sharp minor polo
baise Across the room I could sea
some figures huddled, as it were, in fear
and terror, The thunders of that mnu-
sic rang through the room. It was as
if the Polish legions were marching,
swords outstretched, banners flying,
bustening to die like heroes for faith
and country, singing their love songs
gailantly, although the funeral dirge
Wis to follow
"When Rubinstein bad finished his
face was ushen white, bis breath was
coming in gasps, and he was laboring
ander the excitement ci od by that
mialidy which, alas, a fe years later
was to carry him off! None of us
guessed it then, for, brawny of build,
impatient of sympathy, scorning all
bodily weaknesses, he hid his suffere
ings from those mut him till too lata
had sached bis sixtieth
year, for fifty years subjecting himself
mercilessly to the flerce and absorbing
joys and sorrows of the artist, and the
bour of reckoning was not far away.
After he had puffed at his cigarette for
a few minutes he stood up—the signal
that it was near 11 o'clock and time fo
as to go.”
‘almost
The gifted man is be who sees the
essential point and leaves all the r
ele as surplusage.—Carlyle,
THE LEADER, RAYMOND. ATLRERTAL
FOR ALL
By E. R. Punshon
Ward, Lock & Co, Limited
London, Melbourne & Toronto
———
(Continued)
APTER V1
fom
SS
THE E WHI! LLG
AE Pearcy © nay . NT ,
AMENDS) ae ‘ar
il
iy TORONTO, ONT
PLEASES
A THE Mi
THA
Wi}
KIND :
|
Ei
The Forged Letter } i at i
My de vid in a tone of mild | | H Hh
rebuke an eld lady who had fol-| |
bows! Dura inc, we room, if Witon Hi MOST PERFECT MADE |
iu le atree ONT
: \ face ir
ace, laughed when
he OS | erm
2 ‘ Ra . , Dora possessed, attached to the skirt
an et in| The Sweetest Story ever | of ber dress, a hanging pocket, fron
p Ix ‘ < c I ; which she now produced an extraord
: Pape sr emits told is to tell you of inary multiplicity of objects. 9 Wits
a 1 - came a re of sill 1d then an old
y . glove nen 1 paper bag ' j
ane fal the purity and Taye) rantRi eb ai ManTee On heen atomntonaete
t va Wilte Dora paused to eat lest she should |
Dora I vas @ sweetness of get them and so they be wasted ”
P “ ‘ « inpaid bill f pond note neat
! r ran whet ) n ) folded in 1 tied round w
ata n © prot - a : black thi safety, a silver thin
lex ‘ r S re { il E. D. SMITH S ble 1 description of a recent fash
\ a ilien @ ) able wedding cut from the Mornin
a . R med to have little but Post, a piece of silk to be mateh
! é and flow of youthful spit Regent Street tha ternoon: and fir
its to r ) d her, was a_ fact ally th ‘ n question wedged
, ‘ . surprised those arn several picture postcards
R nna i ‘ Oh, her t tig Ww
et ‘ ; a sigh of rel 1 proceeded to 1
‘ Dora Re , Just fresh picked fruit and ir er vat pos ns to
. aut M stk
; ; wv pipet granulated sugar Mayne t ; l ind d
: ove slowly w ) \ \
wid looking eo -"WHAT COULD BE SWEETER rhis is a forgery id; Tn
« ha e had fe C h
seein rade) You can get them from A forg he two ladies cried
,
Mr Mayne sete u 1 bewild
cae dl? he your grocer mer
¥ othe - ys ; —_
on for pret eyes OR ON RR SOI] DRUGGED HIMSELF IN TUNNEL
P e I tly TS iad ae
: fa Bs , é er glasses Former English Army Officer Discov
ve ; Ve ‘ said Dora wit anot r ered Dead in Rather Strange
¥ ‘ Ke rae ripple of laughter; and here is Wiltor Circumstances
x , asking me if I know her, when twice I don. Et Ai Searing of
: : over he } written to me in the mo Aoer s
the urgent manner asking us to cal! « himself 1 e ha was des
st sho her and be as clvil as p Se ble i ' G oa:
‘ sad cies : y) We have, haven't we, aunt? for we on Claude W hat
: if her a tation to Lady Mar zed 41. « - , ‘eae
2 « > h tor 1’ ud ad e+ .
ere 4 bal and oh, Wilton m going ody was ound ra 4
ot » best des.| Wear a blush pink chiffon, trimmed pro Merb Anil ring and
F : n. after, With silver lace and with a bodice of! emp a : vd -
+ atl owe y er | Silver lace mounted on pink he bods Dr. Ms vall w en
ad hea bee e me, | and filled in above w th w e ly an officer ir - h Stafford
nave: i though dersta she asked anxiot regime
spectac Johnnies had so|, ! understand you will be charming,| Mrs. Marshail stated that her
' . he red band had been ad ed to the drug
Of : > who swore lves And itll just be a dream, she rattied! habit for several year aking
r bounde ves on that occasion | OD, droppil him a low y in} phia and e Iie brok ff i}
rone had ma his devotion more ap acknowledgment of his comp! ent habit ear fe a u " F d
re n Mayn and his 1nd then whirling round in a sort of! not do without the drugs, and 1 ~d
eeling towards her had rapidly ripen tle private preliminary dance, and hem Sh iad «known him to o
d into a true and passionate devo 1 knock all the rast in the eye, too.! into this railway tunn ft pu
At fire , and My dear, my dear, protested her! pose of injecting morphia in‘o t
1 shr , “ horrified aun He went into the tunnel kx
{ klv telliy h All right, auntie sweet, cried Dora,| was dark 1ere nd he objected
bo ber ex waz, Stopping her remoustrance w a kiss,| making th Mections in th g H
Ewe nd ful and,and then giving a quick we told her or at afte: iad inj
s and moor h's| Wikton as m as to ask e ed morp ) le the nue
1 st nierie she | did not wish he had been in! in he became unconsx if on the bridg
€ had been cle er | Dlace just then ist abo She it ha ol
be, and | Yes, | do i on Mayne
to Marry sc I don't know you mear
wra w ‘ te vere | Dora blushing
Cripps, who A.B My dear child, said her aun
< and = av y clever jnte to do her duty in spite ofa
‘ h ay! of he or | dishments, the dency you show
nple wards the use of slang is ina
May! ] girh
pp Ob, auntie, interrupted Dora
giied only yesterday I heard you tell
ry was n« Martin that no girl could be more ve
all, bu from the use of colloquia! and unlady- | *@ te
d pus like expression than mé his leg ¥ Di; oO}
of emo ] know I said 60, said Miss Rose, | Cl8® tha tion
he sticking to her guns valiantly, t I ane St COnSMO lis « n ti p ion
er Co am sorry to 6a oe are sep
from th Oh, aunt, cried Dora, deeply shock- | 19); - at 3 ¢ me a ve
was t ed, you don’t mean to confess 3 Moar } ‘ oe 2
ESpons ve i ove he! were telling Lady Martin fibs’ hag ae ; : aX
p ty . ne : inject mx J n NEC
. there, it was in a good cause, so Ill) 4) 1 injected as 1 ‘ apts
ecame enge 1, and for! forgive you, and you need say no peas f morphi Se >
f t € Tan| more about it, and Lady Martin is a) «pe jury returned a verd ,
eno fe tt appeared | horrid, stiff prim old tiring, isn’t she,! ). yj oe Hips ' 7“
a W OF al stacie to} not a bit like my own auntie sweet ' pend aa
glee cp ppine : Oh, dear, groaned Miss Rose, half in Blind Bandmaster
; Jora bad laugh-! resignation, half in despair, it is al ‘ .
: W 21 day | if| ways the same when | try to scold her Londo! W. P. Tyrre) of Har
> Aug Well, I don't like being scolded,! Wich, althoug h blind, i andma roof
‘ laughed Dora. Wilton, you'll never| the Harwich Company of the Church
e, ag wa a a7) me, will you? Lads’ Brigade He an accou sh
1 Never, promised Wilion promptly, | ed concert Dist and a typ
pis but, dear, just be serious for a mo cageeadini eae
. a mer THE KNOW HOW
ad Oh, I can't, I can't, J can't, sang) To Feed Children and Get Good
4 v a . Dora in a kind of a chant; the world! Results
s, I to run head, and js full of serious people, do let me be rise
Miss Rose 1 a frivolous just for a change. There are more neryo persons
‘ f er Jokir j Yes, but this Miss Durand, persisted! made so by undigeste ood lying in
¥ om mt En at pre Mayne the stomach than the ; rage individ
: \' Oh, we calied yesterday, answered | yal would suppos«
< é ; appily, | Dora, and J don't like her a bit She If food remains undigested in the
fl ak a joke | alway augh |ig so grave and sad, and her e¢yes| stomach, begins to set up
Y + Can et it, and no one| frighten me-—-they make me cold, they! gas and a large portion is thus con
»WS What i 18 about But when’ chill me. So 1 ran away as fast as I) yeried in‘o poison
RY funt y he always looks more! eould—ugh, I always run away from That's why imperfectly digested
ighifully solemn than ever SOrrow food, may, and ofien does, cause irr
Peay suggested Mayne, that is Take care care, child said tation of the nerves and ipor of the
r I don't know 1 am funny-—as! Miss Rose with a sudden gravity; take| mind—brain and nerv are really poi-
example, at present I had no idea! care jest when you run from sorrow) goned
making a joke you run so fast you meet it on the “My daughter ad complained for
then what Go you mean. way. some time of a distressed feeling jin
picking up the photograph There, now you are being solemn,;the stoma after eating, which set
* wards her aunt with
looking as if she were
hat Joan Durand?
protested Dora
Don't let
ine think
dict was not
going to cry on the spot right,’ writes an anxious and intelli
Undoubtedly, said Miss Rose, look-| be solemn—laugh, let us laugh; and gent mother
at it closely through her ey¢ throwing back her head she emitte 1) “She had been fond of Is, but
a peal of laughter so free, so happ)
; s like the merriment of some delic
CONSULTING ENGINEER ious child as yet untouched by sor
row, that the other two could not heip
ENDORSES GIN PILLS joining her There, that's better
Dora cried, now we are happy again
29 Broadway, New York Yes, said Wilton patiqntly, but Dora
*l Lought some of your GIN PILLS i dear, do listen for one moment. What
et Victoria, B.C, last September. Your | is this about this letter to M
reinedy J find, at 60 years of age, to and? 1
lve perfect relief from the Kiduev and | about any
know nothing of any letter
ss Durand
Bladder Troubles incident to ore of ny But we have your letter, said Dora,| have a new lease on life—no more; 4nd can 6 amore olden edical uscovery
age. lurgenily recommend GIN PILLS looking puzzled, but with a smile lurk-| distress in the stomach, n headache | cee oe ' Pierce's }
Ly friends as bring the one thing that | ing in her eyes and at the corners of! put sound and well every Name j Welsh Coal Mines Will be Merged = | +
‘ i) Cw { +’ mouth as though she s ispect' given by Canadian Posluni Co Londo Four great Welsh coal}
eas te good ©. WOODFORD 4 as i idder iol - r y + it el . R -r r v Re y wee | mir ae ee hiel "Dat id Alfred Thoma aly rao forty yeare, pizing quest satisfaction,
0c. a box, 6 for $2.50. Money back inns cig aad gone Ob Which 3 Was | 80 at mend } EU) see re h see ‘ ‘of ‘The — Pierce’s Golden Medi iscovery tablets
i GIN PIL 1. S fail. Sainple free if you nec ry she should be in instant } ville ini igs : | senior member of the firm o 10MAas or by meil—rend 60 one-cent stamps, AY
write National Drag and Chemical Co readiness Pa it was so urg nd “There's a Reason." and Day has a predominating in-
of Canada, Limited, Toronto. ii ind imperative, toy Ever read the above letter? A new! terest, a wh Rca i output 18)
er ees | ONS On ie wk Yous juired| one appears from time to time, They, 3,250,000 Lor be Inerged shoruy | man gr women, Wile ar. dau iar 9: ae
- ie, W by n y looking very] are genuine, true and full of humans 0 BINS company, WIT a vay i} oeut etanpe to prepay curt of Wrapping and postage
wm. 4 843 jig ) ‘ nay |! interest of $16,000, j
Dur-}
had never tried Grape-Nu
readil account of thi
food, it seemed reasonable to try,
Grape-Nuts for her c¢
“The resulls were really wonderfal
The Httle brain that seemed at time
unable to do its
life and vigor EXvery morning, now
before goi io ho she eats the
crisp little morsels and is now com
pletely and entirely well, she
From
predigested
work, took on new
seems to
TRIES TO STRANGLE JUDGE
Jurist Has Terrible Struggle With
Camorrist He Had Just Sen-
tenced
Naples.—-An attempt has recently
been made by a Cammorist prisoner
to strangle a judge at the Naples
criminal court recently. ‘two mem-
bers of the Neapolitan Camorrf, Spal-
‘ . . t Guadaeni, Are ‘ov
aitacked his wife and then gave him- | uity of teett, poe gg ooh
; se ( e ie ny F ay ,
lie “si ye he Pe eye : subbed tenced to sixteen months’ imprison-
jier commi ted suicid a few days | met.
later :
P ; , mmediately sentence was pronoun. |
{ At the trif1, the judge mildly re l pide. ; :
yroached Gauthier, and ntormed hin j ced the prisoner Guadagni, @ man oF
4 . : . iN i + ve 1 aii fo aed Herculean proportions, felled the two
that it would have be as dentinal > aah
es ahvale, a div cs o sited said, hr carabinieri who were on guard and
Addressit : the jury, the publi cecaped from the iron cage in which
monetitar tid: Give him a few beaks | he was confined. He dashed toward
| prosecutor suid: Give him a few weeks! in, judge, and blacked the eye of a
a fe e foy > pr e 5°; . :
7 prison a r — Phy Ags p in = lawyer who attempted to stop him,
er examining the facts and empha-| 1116 iwo ushers each received a blow
sising the shortcomings of the dead} the nose
wome he concluded: Having regard agar ee +h pd as a wild stampede from
{ ll the , COE ‘ 7 re as 4 ste ¢
o all the circumstanc would It Not’ the court, and the president rose and
| JURY ACQUIT A MURDERER
The Unwritten Law Viewed in France
| From Standpoint of Approval :
Paris, France The assize court}
at Dijon, tried a farmer named Ernest
| Gauthier for the murder of a neighbor |
named Fufey, whom he surprised with
j his wife Gauihier dealt his rival
two blows with a spade and the man
died the next day. The farmer also,
be betier for you to xercise your “nt ri |
| atch mitt’ rane : wrapped himself in his robes as
overeign right and pardon the ac |
ised” though uncertain whether to beat a}
retreat. rhe infuriated Camorrist |
lambered up to the judicial bench}
| with amazing agility, and seized the)
assistant judge nearest to him. Cav-}
aliere Vitelli, by the throat and at-|
tempted to throttle him. Both fell}
tothe floor in the desperate struggle. |
Barristers and policemen endeavored |
to separate them, but several minutes |
Constipation
Vanishes Forever | sss setore tne grip of the peor
Prompt Relief---Permanent Care i). chains rhe untortunate 4ucesy
when released was in a state of col-}
CARTER'’S LITTLE lapse
LIVER PILLS never
Purely veget-
act surely
but gently oa
the liver
Stop alter
after a brief deliberation
The jury
br of acquittal
rought In a verdic
Aaa a Priel DARE, he nS PabieS
-_——_---————
The immensi
every one with the
ing
No, it doesn't I took a girl to the
circus once, and she told me she!
|
y of nature strikes |
same awed feel-
'
|
|
po ae | thought the el dated de becetohi was cute
cuetress ni ix srrenepetons” }
cure indi How's THIS |
gestion improve the complexion— brighten
the eyes. Smal! Pill, Small Dose, Small Price.
We offer One Nundred Dollara Reward
for sny case of Catarrh that cannot be |
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. ]
Genuine mus bear Signature F. J. CHENEY @ CO., Toledo. 0. |
7 undersigned, have known F, |
His for the last 15 yenrs. and be- |
4 honest in all business
lng J eae A incially able to carry
ons made by his firm,
KINNAN & MARVIN,
lesale Druggists, Toledo, O,
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken ingernal!
acting directly upon the blood @®d mu
in surfaces of the system. Testimonials
Price 75 cents per bottle.
sts
MYSTERIOUS MIDNIGHT TRAGEDY
— sent free
. r , e\ Sold by all druggi
Artilleryman Believed to} lake itall’s Family Pills for constipa-
Missing
Have Been Murdered by Two tion.
Bluejackets | ed
ta At som 1ere about mid Weather Wise
t rhursday two Mal boat-} tn a ceriain town the local forecast-
men reported to police that two! 4. of the weather was so often wrong
» and an artilleryman had) ina: pis predictions became a standing |
n on their craft for convey- jake, io his no small annoyance, for
ar Val he was very 8 tive. At length, |
hen nid 4 in despair of livi down his reputa-
Ss el t d tion, he asked headquarters to transfer
une ileryman him to another station
1 sea wa 1 A brief correspondence ensued.
he 8, bY in Why, asked headquariers, do you
the boatmen from wish to be transferred?
ene the soldiez 7 Because, the forecaster promptly |
On reaching the shore 1, the climate doesn't agree with
decamped, and the a
turned to Lae ee Se
} been thro
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
CUCU TEPEROEECOTLTERIOROT TELAT |
Feeling Out Of
Sorts ?
Wn
willsetyouright. Its invig-
orating action on the liver and
digestive organs will clear
your brain and give you anew
interest in work or play.
Take A_ Bottle Home
o-day.
ALAC NT I
When buying your Piano in-
sist on having an
“OTTO HIGEL”
Piano Action
idle property ¢ n
ech we B | ated. te
ee profits
WOODLAWN,” ST.
“DEER LOD properties are
investments We want a good
to represent us in every town
rms app)
STEWART & WALKER. LTD.
Sterling Bank Building, V/innipeg
“Don't waste time wri gs if
do not inean business.”
&
VITAL,
REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.
Mrs, WINSLOW's SooTHING Sykur has bees
weed for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE
TERTUING, with PERFECT SUCCES it
SOOTHES the CHILD, SOPTENS the G CMS,
ALLAY 1 PAIN; CURES WINDCOLIC, and
is the best remedy ‘for DIARRHG:A, It ir ab
2
1 prove is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE solutely harmless, Be sure and ask for “Mra.
matter te for tl signature of im. W. GROV Winslow's Soothing Syr end ake me vine
matter t & ft
s a Cold in One Day. Cures Orip| mind, Dwemty-five cents a bettie,
i> vol Bc
b ‘ prt TE Bt OEES
plage Py | with the wan Bluft FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS.
} had » e t 1 ) ay Mr. Bode on is here, sir, said the | 5 oeeee 3 tA
‘ B rf be ni 1c Shall I im in? SUFFER from k peey PEADDI
ae ; : No, replied the at organizer, let] Srte tor my FR
Wil m John yo nd ey Ae m for about] } wero ar BOOK EVER watt
cock, both able “amen nm , com i - | 45 and the ara suse TED by
A rs of an hour lie has a THER Y. Nel Ne2 NOD
eta eee sition, but 1 am anxious to! TH HER IND bons" decide
oer : ’ from tt dea that} Mitsetheremed AP
al ie pau Abselu'el F FREE, No follewep'ci
f 65 Company v MED. Co, HAVERSTOCA RD, Maur
A ! aa
I ndications are
old
les s ‘ i] g eth, pi
" Pay , \ it 8 t adine
: ng ng of the nose, ex ne pe nes Maypole Soap
: a ‘ a ofien convulsions Und ue SLe aN
4 oe ras “ ynd n he be remedy Cia Hk see
1e magis : = a ’
eding \ ! got is Miller . 4, colors, free fiom
ed having bee a ‘ , They wilt attach i wo m daalie and shodiehs
. quarrel ar iat rey 48 adminis red and will grind ely fast. Does not
made tt mel cause leave o o atoms that pass away in the starnhands or kettles
ali men dt ypped Cor tations. “Ph tlle re will colors, will give
4 ly d ; . immediately eased an return of apy shade. Colats
ce oth m attack wi not be | 1c, black 15c, at
One of the 1 ( h ate est aoe? your dealer's of
ment to th p nimande 4 No Encouragement post-paid with
: 1 1d T hit him, and Pars (to workman who keep ok et How te
overbalanced and fell ing nips from his bottle)—-Do Dye” from
bo » t sca 5 know. my man, I never tasted sy Be L BENEDICT & co Sa
5 rol ! Ro 1 Arthu in my lif ——
i a and at v a ne Vor} tt ! N« a! you an a-<
ine ry mi e adj urn i and thet gi re ne The Shirker
Roval Arthur will sa Ph 1 on = ; : eae : - :
ers having a d being on boat A Soft Answer it you Fe bn rox hare ve we &
. b manded 2 e htachodiad = n the world the lances are a
Ronn ae eis he Ss You seem t¢ 1 able-bodied MAN.| cone one else will have to do it
be strong enough to
They Wanted to Hear it
you. But you won't draw his ove
} time or secure his promotions, oF
Piha cf Byclocdynck rr gee ser a : hose that might have been yours had
her kindergarten cla I we you beautiful go on the slag vou tried. There is a xood deal of
ol v L q rg n ti A bul i vou pref h nple justic in the er arid.<-reramdioas 4
oe ytes h cha ft a4 + what th croakers and malcontents
Ailey na 5 See DOD uk erasers (pie : may tel) you, and the shirker, in
and the teach was about to British and French Navies Unite Anisicg lle Work Golakea lk” D8}
mincopetl oo peer Ostend, Belgium Mlotillas of Brit: | which got . loa bet er ™ an who w i
_— we ae 4 ter’ ers and submarines are carrying out hecause he atte nded to susiness and
iis oe a series of 2 ght ar ae was industrious and polite. His com
wee Sey operatic in a Qnglish chann pag ae : se ’
Clean Stomach, Clear Mind mh Th ; preg ees 0 of the floiillas are} ay eogarf “7 ne ae or ae et
tomach is the workshop of th vi following common pka of action and | vorK W done, a \ é
Tunctions and w ’ }
frequent excn
it gets out of ordey
here is a ze of wire
ihe whole system clogs in sympathy. |jegs messages between the vessels.
The spirits fla th jroops and Hine WEN eS
work becomes impossibl The firs A woman with a se ’ret sorrow never
Id be to restore healthful) pest intil it is known
the stomach and the be
n for that purpose is Parm Truth
§ egelable Pills General use
for years has won them a eleadir
place in medi cing A trial will attest
ushed to earth will rise
nine times out of ten the;
iin the fact
| tractors may not be
all,
gets away first. \*
jal reward, and somewhat, perhaps,
ibat the opinion of his d
o important after
Whenever the weather man does
turn out an article guarantced io sv
some storm or other comes
poils it.
along and
their value
Minard’s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. |
The FE
Cheerful Under Difficulties
If you make any noise, threaiened|
the holdup man, I'll stu ff this hand |
kerchief in your mouth!
\ The victim regarded it witha
ily smile
| Qh, that’s such an old gag, he pro-|
tested |
AEE SSE }
Probably there is nothing that will and your luegs full of good pure alr and you
make a Woman quite so happy as. the bearta germs, The best known tonic and alterative, that
possession of a thing her rival wants
with sper
gums of
The M Osqi tiatow » ts bit tno tt
and helps digestion sv that good bleod is manvfactsrsd ang the system mowrished, is
This famous medicine has as han baste sold by medicine rr vn in ite liquid form ——s
Questions of Life ora Soy and prop erly sels snp meved is in the People's Madieal Aa
estiocts the lavistbie
ey hy oe
{
"
E ARE all exposed to sick” aac is pood red
blood! Let your stomach be of food digestion, your liver active
of the discase-
ont surrender an
a torpid liver.
Uf you prefer you can mow obtsin Dr.
spyeer drugeiet at $1.00, also in B0c sise
1
eree, M Buffalo, N.Y., for trial box’
A ow
ie entaine ifo th bie Home Docter
in cloth, seat frac to auvone sending D0 aie
ett ne eee
%? -.
We. ats
2 bd
(et: ee ala: ale ala:
YIP Uy YD TF 4B
» @%ai
Sy rye
14 “ava:
as
2
a ert eee J tee ee
bet el
i ile ed
r
#
FURNITURE
A complete set of cooking utensils,
dining room set, chairs, table and buffet.
with carpets everything complete.
Lhe eadcder Office
“Are You Wise?”
ale ale ala
& “er “~~
‘or Young Married Couples Who are Just Starting
ats
in life to get mmm.
als
7,»
a%s
@, 4”
f\ |
a%. ate
Range etc. A nice oak
A nice bedroom set
Prices Right.
a%, ale
g, NO Lf ¢, 2 /\
als
fh
APPLY AT,
e%s als
“3 1
afa || ats
e% ale
im \7 ee \/ Yee \/ ee \7 ee \/ eee \/ eet \/ et V7 eet VS
| ge. % Pe . | “ey |
ee
Business Cards.
Wha. Paris
Tinsmith and Plumber
RAYMOND ALBERTA
w. A Seriaus
Boot and Shoe
REPAIRER.
IF SO, GET YOUR
Next Door East of O’Brien’s
Store.
ALL KINDS OF DISPLAY BILLS, BA 1
tatt
ETTER HEAD, ENVELOPES AND
STATEMENTS. Dr. P. H. Johnson
ALSO Bs: yi Ree Sees oie ores
LACATED at STIRLING, ALTA.
Gritait>-o2. 3a
College.
Ido Veterinary work in all its
Branches.
Calls promptly attended.
LEAVE ORDERS at Blairs’ Drug Co.
RAYMOND, ~
Veterinary
PROGRAMS, ETC.
Dhe Leaders
ALTA.
ae 0 a a nee a ee nee
Professional Cards,
Dr. J. Elmer Amos
Dentist
D.D.S. University of Toronto
geons of Ontario
Graduate of Dominion Dental
Council of Canada,
Office Broadway and 2nd _ north.
Hours 9 to 12, Ito 5,
WEDNESDAYS ONLY
RAYMOND. - ALTA
L.D.S.Royal College Dental Sur- | i
CARPIETS amd IRUGS.
Axminister, Velvet, Tapestry, Jute
and Jap Straw. All sizes & colors,
CURTAINS.
Netts, Scrim and Swiss. Any
length in White
Curtains made up in 2'4
and Ecru.
to 3 anda half yards.
CUIRTAIIN IPOILIES
Brass, Wood and White Enamel.
BILIINIDS.
All widths and for all windows
These and other lines we are very
strong on. Come and see them.
Raymond Mercantile Co.,
LIMITED.
We Want Your Trade
Bhs i
é
AK Ae Be Dees ae AK A Oe ae SPP Sy EP PLCS BS BC LAS RP BO E> CRY MTT ee 2 € a
‘ NE SNCS TRS 7S RA OOS eat OOS marr wie ae oe ) a=
ie PALE a is a eR
ok As2 ASoe ied, he Se a9 ae SES hae \
\
Corner Store g*y Phone Id
iy
ty
SO AS AE Bs
Mae eae
1 RCE Pw
5
MS
fe COMPLETE STOCK OF a
e , . Be
= RUBBER BOOTS. =
3 MENS, WOMENS AND CHILDRENS.
‘eat es
: RUBBERS. :
- RIGHT PRIGES, ®
sae, — nm ie
Bers sae
4 LATEST STYLES IN a
a BOOTS & SHOES be
* “CALL ANDSEEOUR.”” ©
ie ey
Ge : ae
© PRINTS and GINGHAMS ©
a : ,. &
HORSES FOR SALE. ©
ia ma ie
. The O'ldrien-Nalder Co. ae
ae 1% aa
ae sel he G te